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The Horror Story Unit

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A Tell Tale Heart Notes Title It means – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Horror Story Unit


1
(No Transcript)
2
The Tell Tale Heart
  • Questions and Answers

3
The Tell Tale Heart
Summary The narrator of the story is a renter
who gets a little excited because his land lord
has one dead eye - so he kills him and conceals
him under the floor boards of his room. The
police come looking for the old guy and have a
pleasant conversation with the narrator in his
room. The narrator however hears the beating of
his victims heart and becomes more and more
distressed until he flies into a fit, tears up
the floor boards and tears the heart out of the
corpse to show the police officers to prove to
them that it really is making a noise.
4
  • 1) What does the story's title mean?
  • The story's title refers to the beating heart
    that eventually
  • drives the narrator to confess his crime. The
    reader is led
  • to believe it is the beating of the old man's
    heart he hears,
  • an impossibility, considering the old man has
    been murdered
  • and dismembered, leaving three possibilities
  • (1) the narrator is insane (2) the narrator
    feels guilt over the crime and hears his own
    heart (3) both.

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  • 2) The narrator claims he is not mad. What
    evidence do we have that he is?
  • (1) He murders an old man because of his "vulture
    eye"
  • (2) He hears sounds from hell
  • (3) He dismembers the dead man's corpse
  • (4) He hears the beating of a dead man's heart
  • (5) He is paranoid
  • (6) He is "nervous--very, very dreadfully
    nervous."

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  • 3) What does the narrator do with the dead man's
    body?
  • The narrator dismembers the body and carefully
    places it
  • under a few floor boards in the old man's room.
    He's
  • confident that his crime will not be discovered,
    even
  • inviting the investigator to sit on a chair
    directly above the
  • dead body.

7
  • 4) Why does the narrator want to kill the old
    man?
  • "Object there was none. Passion there was none. I
    loved
  • the old man. He had never wronged me. He had
    never given
  • me insult. For his gold I had no desire. I think
    it was his
  • eye! yes, it was this!" (172).

8
  • 5) The narrator visits the old man's bedroom
    every night for seven nights before killing him
    on the eighth night. What finally causes him to
    commit the act?
  • He hears the old man's heart. The narrator says,
    "It was the beating
  • of the old man's heart. It increased my fury, as
    the beating of a drum
  • stimulates the soldier into rage...the hellish
    tattoo of the heart increased.
  • It grew quicker and quicker, and louder and
    louder every instant...I thought
  • the heart must burst. And now a new anxiety
    seized methe sound would
  • be heard by a neighbor! The old man's hour had
    come!" (174-5).

9
  • 6) What sort of disease does the narrator claim
    to have and what has it done for the narrator's
    senses?
  • The narrator claims to have a disease that makes
    his senses really powerful.
  • It has sharpened them. "The madness had sharpened
    my senses, not destroyed, not dulled them. Above
    all was the sense of hearing acute..."

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  • 7) What is the narrator's strongest sense and
    what does it allow him to do?
  • The narrator's strongest sense is his sense of
  • hearing, and it allows him to hear everything
  • that is going on everywhere, including "earth,"
  • "heaven," and especially "hell."

11
  • 8) What argument does the narrator present as to
    why he is not insane?
  • The narrator claims that insane people have no
  • knowledge or skill, but he has planned everything
  • out very carefully.

12
  • 9) What was the reason why the narrator killed
    the old man?
  • "I think it was his eye--yes it was this! One of
  • his eyes resembled that of a vulture- a pale
  • blue eye, with a film over it. Whenever it ran
  • upon me my blood ran cold...."

13
  • 10) During the week before the narrator killed
    the old man, how did he act towards him?
  • He was very kind "I was never kinder to the old
  • man than during the whole week before I killed
  • him."

14
  • 11) How long did it take the narrator to place
    his head into the door so that he could see the
    old man?
  • An hour "It took me an hour to place my whole
  • head within the opening so far that I could see
  • him as he lay upon his bed."

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  • 12) For how many nights did the narrator look in
    upon the old man?
  • Eight nights "...and I did this for seven long
  • nights--every night just at midnight-every night
  • just at twelve...Upon the eighth night I was
  • more than usually cautious in opening the door."

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  • 13) Why couldn't the narrator kill the old man on
    the first night?
  • The eye was closed "...but I found the eye
  • always closed and so it was impossible to do the
  • work for it was not the old man who vexed me,
  • but his Evil Eye."

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  • 14) What did the narrator do by accident which
    awakened the old man?
  • His thumb slipped on the lantern. The narrator
  • quietly laughed at the thought that the old man
  • didn't have any idea about what he was up to,
  • but this did not wake the old man up. It was
  • when the narrator's thumb slipped on the tin
  • fastening of the lantern that he woke the old
  • man up.

18
  • 15) What causes the narrator to finally jump on
    the old man?
  • He can hear the old man's heart beating, and at
  • some point he feels it is so loud that is may
  • wake someone up, so he jumps on the man to
  • stop the noise.

19
  • 16) What did the old man cry out when awakened?
  • "Who's there?" "I kept quite still and said
  • nothing. For a whole hour I did not move a
  • muscle, and in the meantime I did not hear him
  • lie down."

20
  • 17) What was the low, dull, quick sound that the
    narrator heard?
  • The old man's heartbeat "I knew THAT sound
  • well too. It was the beating of the old man's
  • heart. It increased my fury, as the beating of a
  • drum stimulates the soldier into courage."

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  • 18) The beating grew louder--what was the new
    anxiety that seized the narrator at this point?
  • The sound being heard by neighbors "...the old
  • man's hour had come! With a loud yell, I threw
  • open the lantern and leaped into the room."

22
  • 19) After the old man was dead, what was the
    first thing the narrator did to conceal the body?
  • He dismembered it "I cut off the head and the
  • arms and the legs."

23
  • 20) What was the next thing he did to conceal the
    body?
  • He buried it beneath the floor.

24
  • 21) Why were the police sent to the house?
  • A neighbour had heard the old man shriek and
  • suspected foul play. The police were called to
  • investigate it.

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  • 22) What was it that made the narrator confess to
    the crime?
  • The old man's heartbeat. It can be theorized that
    the
  • guilt of the narrator was ultimately what made
    the narrator
  • confess. The narrator hears a sound and swears
    that the
  • sound was NOT his own. He insists that the
    heartbeat
  • belonged to the old man, and could not figure out
    why the
  • police officers couldn't hear it as well. We know
    that the
  • heartbeat was the narrators, but we are viewing
    this from
  • the standpoint of the narrator, not our own
    rational minds.

26
  • 23) How does Poe create tension and suspense in
    the story?
  • He describes second by second the process that
  • the narrator went through for seven nights and
  • the night of the killing. Also, the state of the
  • narrators mind leaves the reader to wonder what
  • is going to happen, is he going to get caught,
  • and how.

27
  • Pacing - the narrator describes the murder over
    several pages.
  • Foreshadowing - "I was never kinder to the old
    man than during the whole week before I killed
    him." (172).
  • Dangerous Action - the narrator invites the
    police officer to sit directly above the dead
    body.

28
  • 24) What wise actions of the narrator ensured
    that no one would detect anything was wrong?
  • He dismembered the body in some sort of tub to
  • catch the blood. He buried the body parts in the
  • floor boards, so they wouldnt be found. He
  • carefully replaced the floorboards so no one
  • would notice.

29
  • 25) What are some examples of imagery used by Poe
    in the story? (How Poe allows the reader to
    either see, hear, smell, taste, or touch/feel
    something)
  • He groans a groan of mortal terror.
  • came to my ears a low, dull, quick, sound, such
    as a watch makes when enveloped in cotton.
  • all a dull blue with a hideous veil over it
    that chilled the very marrow in my bones

30
  • 26) Find additional examples of figurative
    language in the story. (Simile, Alliteration,
    Repetition)
  • Alliteration He groans a groan of mortal
    terror
  • Repetition much such a sound as a watch makes
    when enveloped in cotton

31
  • 27) The two controlling symbols in the story are
    the eye and the heart. What might these two
    symbols represent?
  • The old man's eye is "pale blue, with a film over
    it,
  • indicating a lack of visual clarity and
    reliability. In this
  • sense the eye symbolizes the narrator in so much
    that all
  • the information we receive comes through his
    distorted
  • mind, much in the same way everything the old man
    sees is
  • filtered through his distorted eye.

32
  • Furthermore, the story is told through the
    narrators
  • perspective, who claims his actions are on
    account of the
  • distorted eye, which suggests the point of view
    is literally
  • and symbolically filtered through the old mans
    eye.
  • Traditionally the heart symbolizes the emotional
    centre of the individual. In The Tell Tale Heart,
    it symbolizes the narrators guilt.

33
  • 28) Plot Create a timeline of events as they
    occur in the story.
  • The police come to question the narrator
  • The narrator kills the old man
  • The narrator speaks extra kindly to the old man
  • The narrator becomes obsessed with the old mans
    eye
  • The narrator tears up the floorboards and admits
    to killing the old man
  • The narrator buries the old man in the
    floorboards
  • The narrator brags about his sagacity in planning
  • The narrators thumb slips on the lanterns latch
  • The narrator hears the beating of a heart (will
    be on the timeline twice)
  • A neighbor reports hearing a shriek

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A Tell Tale Heart
  • Notes

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Title
  • It means "giving information (often which a
    person would not wish to be known) Example the
    telltale signs of guilt.

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Plot
  • Classic example of Freitags Pyramid

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Point of view
  • -Gothic horror story, told in 1st person point of
    view, dramatic monologue from the perspective of
    a man who has committed a crime.
  • -This story would be completely different if told
    from 3rd person point of view or from the point
    of view of one of the police officers.

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Narrator
  • -The biggest effect of Poe's decision to let his
    readers into the mind of the killer in his story
    is that it creates a nervous, creepy mood.

40
Title
  • It means "giving information (often which a
    person would not wish to be known) Example the
    telltale signs of guilt.

41
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