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Edgar Allen Poe's The Masque Of The Red Death

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Edgar Allen Poe was a very mysterious American writer in the eighteen hundreds. Many questioned his poems and stories because of how odd they sounded compared to reality. Edgar Allen Poe had a well expanded imagination due to his distressed life He was separated from his family at a very young age and became a foster kid. His death to all of us was unknown; in his honor his death was never solved and stayed a mystery till this day. He had a very unique creative type of writing that inspired many authors today. Tuberculosis is a disease that took the lives of many important women in his life; he never really got along with men. Due to the many deaths in his life, he drank alcohol to relieve the pain and make up for the loss. He tried connecting his stories …show more content…

If you had the plague you would have symptoms of pain, dizziness, and blood seeping through your pores. This story also relates to Edgar’s life because this plague and tuberculosis are similar deadly diseases that kill people. It killed Poe’s most important woman in his life, his wife, mother, and foster mother. Edgars last few years were depressing and melancholy, he drank increasingly everyday. He would write his characters with a drunken image relating to him drinking. In, “The Black Cat,” the main character comes home drunk and attacks his innocent cat. “I was overcome by the fiery demon of alcohol,” the drunken character thought. This was the last character Poe described like himself before he died. In 1846 Edgar published a book called,” The Cask of Amontillado.” The victim of this story is a drunk and the murderer takes advantage of that. He chains the drunk to a stone and is forever kept in the catacombs. Poe can relate to the drunk character because in his life he was the victim of his sad life. He made the character trapped because that is probably how he felt in his

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