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Pluto In Edgar Allen Poe's The Black Cat

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The horrific story of The Black cat written by Edgar Allen Poe conveys the narrator having a relationship with his pet Pluto. The Narrator loves his cat but after a while he starts to abuse his car and later and kills his own cat. Due to his intoxication, Pluto is abused and later the cat signifies a lot of the owner. As the owner abuses his cat, his is slowly hurting himself by losing his sanity, intoxication and being insane. The symbolism of The Black Cat resembles more than just it being the title of the story. The cat which is named Pluto symbolizes the narrator’s life of consisting a dark and decaying soul. As the cat was stabbed by his owner who was intoxicated as stated by the narrator “I took from my waistcoat-pocket …show more content…

The narrator sees a cat that resembles Pluto as the cat “was a black cat – a very large one – fully as large as Pluto and closely resembling him in every respect but one. Pluto had not a white hair upon any portion of his body; but [the] cat had a large, although indefinite splotch of white covering nearly the whole region of the beast”. This is showing that the owner is getting this sense of remorse towards his original companion which he committed a deadly sin. This is also showing that the owner is far from being himself and finally has become insane as right after Pluto’s death that another cat that resembles Pluto shows up and the cat is calm towards In Conclusion the owner goes through so many various behaviors that control his actions towards the animals and people around him that it makes him seem he is only hurting himself. What the owner goes through with his companion is just horrific and starts to affect his own soul by the deadly murder. His soul by the end of this has this effect that it is completely gone and has decayed after some point of time. Finally this shows that the owner changes in his state of

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