The Black Cat

             In literature, irony is a tremendously important facet of fictional work. Irony involves a
             contrast or discrepancy between one thing and another. The contrast may be between what is said
             and what is meant or between what happens and what is meant to happen. In Edgar Allan Poe's
             The Black Cat, Poe demonstrates irony in the sense that loved ones can stretch human emotions
             and actions beyond the limits of morality. The ironies in Edgar Allan Poe's stories are
             unexpectedly horrific. All his stories end up in a dreadful manner. Similar to any other of Poe's
             stories, The Black Cat is dark, tragic and surreal. The main character changes from a polite,
             compassionate man into a psychopathic murderer. These ironic dimensions of The Black Cat
             combined with the author's sinister style of writing make for an exciting story with important
             twists and possible answers of superstition.
             In The Black Cat, no names are mentioned. This is probably because they are not essential
             for the plot in the story, for only the events are important to the story's purpose. The Black Cat is
             an emotionless, and yet psychotic story. The plot's main focus is a first person narrator who
             describes his horrid actions as "a series of mere household events" , that in effect were, but the
             outcomes of these "mere household events" were not in any way insignificant.
             One day the main character came home drunk, and committed a dreadful deed. He had
             taken the family cat and pulled one of its eye's out. When he woke up and realized what he had
             done he felt terrible. The cat avoided him for a period of time, but still went about the house as
             usual. Even after feeling much remorse over taking his eye out, he somehow was not satisfied
             enough so he murdered the cat by hanging it on a tree. However, the cat came back to life after a
             fire burned his house down. It was the same cat but with one dissimilarity, a white line of hair...

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The Black Cat. (1969, December 31). In MegaEssays.com. Retrieved 10:10, September 14, 2025, from https://www.megaessays.com/viewpaper/35734.html