РефератыИностранный языкCaCask Of Amontillado Essay Research Paper 2

Cask Of Amontillado Essay Research Paper 2

Cask Of Amontillado Essay, Research Paper


"I must not only punish, but punish with impunity. A wrong is unredressed


when retribution overtakes its redresser. It is equally unredressed when the


avenger fails to make himself felt as such to him who has done the wrong."


With these ferverous words from the introductory paragraph of Edgar Allan Poe’s


Cask of Amontillado, the story of Montresor’s revenge begins. Poe repeatedly


stresses the need for revenge due to bitterness and resentment in Montresor’s


character towards Fortunato, but more importantly, stress is placed on revenge


by which the victim realizes their injustice towards the redresser.


Unfortunately, it seems that Montresor is denied this pure and encompassing


revenge when his victim, Fortunato, during his last few minutes with Montresor,


believes that his actions are a huge charade, and not the actions of a man


scorned and seeking revenge. Although in burying Fortunato alive, Montresor is


able to physically accomplish what he ultimately desired, he is left with an air


of insatisfaction judging by his own definition of true and justified revenge.


Poe shows the resentment Montresor feels towards Fortunato from the very first


sentence of the story with, "The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne


as best I could; but when he ventured upon insult, I vowed revenge." It is


never specified what this injury was to Montresor, but it was so obviously so


heinous that Fortunato was not to be spared. Later in the story, Montresor


implores Fortunato half-heartedly, "Come, we will go back; your health is


precious. You are rich, respected, admired, beloved; you are happy, as once I


was." once again showing strong resentment towards the unsuspecting


Fortunato, whom he clearly blames for his present lower status. We soon see


foreshadowing of Fortunato’s impending doom when the issue of Montresor’s shield


of arms is brought into the conversation as "A huge human foot d’or, in a


field azure; the foot crushes a serpent rampant whose fangs are imbedded in the


heel.". Even more appropriate is Montresor’s family motto, translated as,


"No one wounds me with impunity". Such a visual depiction and mental


conviction due to family honor and history creates all the more impetus in


Montresor to carry out the punishment that Fortunato deserves for wronging him,


and more likely the family honor. When Montresor finally captures Fortunato in


the catacombs, the climax of his precisely calculated deed, he revels in the


sound of Fortunato’s chains rattling, and "that I might hearken to it with


the more satisfaction, I ceased my labors and sat down upon the bones".


However, his satisfaction soon turns

to apprehension when suddenly "a


succession of loud and shrill screams, bursting from the throat of the chained


form, seemed to thrust me violently back". He hesitates at this moment,


when his revenge is sweetest, when he should bask in the suffering of his


"enemy", and finds himself contemplating the shrill screams of his


captive! He does eventually compose himself and takes a few more moments of


pleasure from his captive’s struggles, but his apprehension returns just as he


places the final brick. He "struggled with its weight", showing his


confusion at the path his revenge is taking. The little pleasure he did derive


from Fortunato’s suffering is further dulled when Fortunato asks Montresor to


finish jesting with him, and return to the palazzo with him. To the shock and


chagrin of Montresor, Fortunato does not even seem to accept that he is burying


him alive! Before he should change his course of action, a riddled Montresor


places the last brick as his "heart grew sick – on account of the dampness


of the catacombs.". Montresor, although successful in his settling of the


score with Fortunato, falls short of what he had said and hoped his act of


revenge would be. He achieved his revenge, but at a cost to him, the


"redresser". He is left with such a guilty conscience that he is


forced to confess to his crime 50 years later. As the "avenger",


Montresor also feels he fails to make Fortunato realize that he is exacting


revenge upon him, as shown by his frustration when Fortunato believes that the


situation he is in now is a joke on Montresor’s account. Fortunato, instead of


begging for help and forgiveness, as Montresor wanted, laughed! "A low


laugh that erected the hairs upon my head. It was succeeded by a sad voice,


which I had difficulty in recognizing as that of the noble Fortunato.".


Noble Fortunato? Even after all the infractions he suffered to his person, and


all the pains he took in seeking and executing revenge, he refers to Fortunato


as noble? This is clearly his guilty and riddled conscience speaking. One can


also hypothesize that Fortunato did realize what the reality of the situation


was, and cheated Montresor from the satisfaction of his success by leaving him


in a lurch as to whether he did the right thing. What ever the case may be,


Montresor unfortunately never realized the true revenge that he had hoped he


would exact on his enemy Fortunato. Revenge, although executed exactly as


Montresor planned, still eluded him by falling short of his own expectations.


Physically, Montresor had won this match, but Fortunato had ultimately taken


away the sweetness of this victory that Montresor so eagerly yearned.

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