If you were watching an advertisement encouraging people to quit using nuclear weapons, but there was nothing about nukes in the video, would it change your opinion? How about if you were watching a video promoting a pill that could make you live forever? However, instead of talking about this pill the video starts talking about a funeral home. Would you still want to buy this pill? The setting of a story is very important to the plot and theme. If what the author is describing is not the same as the theme as the author is going for are they doing a good job? In the stories "Contents of a Dead Man's Pocket" by Jack Finney, "There Will Come Soft Rains" by Ray Bradbury, and "Masque of the Red Death" by Edgar Allan Poe this is especially evident. "Contents of a Dead Man's Pocket" is about how the ambition of a young …show more content…
To try and escape death the prince in "... the deep seclusion of one of his castellated abbeys. … resolved to leave means neither of ingress nor egress…"(Poe 3). The abbey is heavily fortified so as to not let anyone in that wasn't supposed to be there and keep the plague out. Even though the abbey is fortified the masked figure, the Red Death makes it in "His vesture was dabbled in blood…" (Poe 8). This is describing the Red Death's appearance at the masquerade. This story is much like a story told in the Harry Potter series about three brothers. In this story as well as the other one the brothers try to cheat death who is portrayed in as a human-ish figure. Instead of killing them then he congratulates them and sends them on their way. Then slowly he finds them and kills them. In both stories, no one escapes death. In "Masque of the Red Death" without the abbey, you wouldn't be able to get an idea of the measures being taken to keep the red death out. However, because this is included you can see the prince is fighting to stay alive and still he