Authors often use creepy settings because it is what revolves around the event. For example, In The Cask of Amontillado it creates a creepy setting, “I busied myself among the pile of bones of which i have before spoken, throwing them aside”(83). This gives us a suspicious and vigorous feeling of who’s pile of bones that is? It creates an idea that murder has occurred. Another ideal of a direful set is in the story The Raven when the narrator says, “A distinctly dying ember wrought its ghost upon the floor”(467). He clearly tells us what he remembers in December. About the fire tugging its ghost upon the floor. The dreadful settings makes the appearance of it’s leading to the event.
Descriptions of characters let’s us know what the character will or may do. For example, In A Rose for Emily, the character Emily demands, “I want arsenic”. She demands wantin arsenic letting us predict what she may do with it. It gives us clues making a Gothic story more interesting. In Addition, the author of The Masque of the Red Death wrote, “His vesture was dabbed in blood and his broad brow, with the scarlet horror"(122). The Masque of Red Death is about to attack showing himself in blood with his scarlet horror. It scares the people primarily as to just killing them for a more captivating event . By creating an obscure character, people attend achieving Gothic greatness.
The event is the climax of the story with many unexpected tragic stories. For example, in Good Country People Hulga yells at at Manly Pointer, “‘Give me my leg!’ she screamed and tried to lunge for it, but he pushed her down easily”(12). Hulga