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The Fall Of The House Of Usher

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A Haunted Palace is a ballad, which is written as part of Edgar Allan Poe's short story, The Fall of the House of Usher. A man named Roderick that is mentally unstable, is the one that sings the poem in The Fall of the House of Usher. As Roderick's house is disintegrating, so is his mind. He still sees the deteriorating house as a palace. The mansion represents a human, "through two luminous windows," which pertains to the person's eyes. "Pearl and ruby," which is describing the person's teeth and lips, and "over fabric half so fair! / Banners yellow, glorious, golden," which is referring to the person's blonde hair. As the poem goes on, it shows how the person falls deeper into depression. The mansion in the poem is used as a metaphor for a person going insane. …show more content…

In this world, there are many things in this world that can drive a person to insanity. Whether it is loneliness, death of a loved one, stress, depression, guilt, the list can go on. The mind is so fragile that a series of events beyond a person's control can send any ordinary person to slip into madness. The poem started off so beautifully, "In the greenest of our valleys, by good angels tenanted, once a fair and stately palace." Then, it got deeper and darker towards the end. In the last few lines, "a hideous throng rush out forever, and laugh but smile no more," represent when the person slipped into insanity after being depressed, especially with the maniacal laughter at the end. It was reflecting how a person can go from happy, and then something unfortunate happens and they change

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