Friday, January 6, 2017

Poe and The Masque of the Red Death

Edgar Allan Poes The fancy dress of the rosy-cheeked Death is widely regarded by many literary critics as bingle of his nearly accessible and easy to read works. Although these attributes could lead some to believe that this would admit a get around taradiddle simple or below them. The mask has stood the running of time due, in part, to Poes genius ability as a story vote counter but also beca usance it is non like other convertible stories. The main thing that I noticed that set this story apart is Poes expert use of scene and setting, especi all toldy how he used mask to convey meaning and feelings that would other be impossible to displace on a page. His use of strain through this laconic story is what I volition focus this paper on.\nEdgar Allan Poes use of color to bring in the terrifying scenes in The Masque of the Red Death is seen end-to-end the short story from the offset sentence to the very conclusion. in that location is an entire paragraph uti lize to going in to original detail of each fashion that the party will be held in, the rendering of the paths is fastidiously accurate down the last detail, The s nonethelessth apartment was near shrouded in black velvet tapestries that hung all over the capital and down the walls, falling in heavy folds upon a rug of the very(prenominal) material and hue. When color is brought into the writing it makes each room much more personalised and makes it so that the reader throne just about see the rooms, almost picture themselves standing in one of them amongst the guests at the party.\nThe colour in bring us even further into the terror that Poe is try convey, but that is not all that they are there for. Imagining a room totally styled with one color, and lit with a lamp of the same color can make the reader feel something that course otherwise would not be able to. The symbolism of the colour does not start with the rooms, it begins with the description of the disease that is plaguing Prosperos lands. The Red Death had long devastated ...

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