The Meaning Of Murders In The Rue Morgue By Edgar Allen Poe

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As the first modern detective adventure, “The Murders in the Rue Morgue,” really hits the bittersweet spot for many yearning that sense of secrecy, mystery, and indecisiveness. Written in 1841 by the ingenious mind of Edgar Allen Poe, the most infamous writer in the last semicentury, this short story expands on such a lengthy and convoluted investigation into the murders of a woman and her daughter on the fictional crossroad in Paris known as Rue Morgue. Although the complex dialect of nineteenth century storytelling may compel some readers to have a closer look at the meaning of each descriptive scene, this piece of textured fiction may indeed be one for the the ages, the first of its kind, and an example for all who covet to follow in …show more content…

If one were to read over, and decipher, most of Poe’s work they would think he is a man beyond one’s self repair, and would be unfortunately precise on the matter. His childhood, leading all the way through his adulthood, is where he formed the craving for sinister narration found in his written productions. Within a few years of his birth, both of Poe’s parents had succumb to their binded fates and had passed away. Being taken in by a wealthy tobacco owner, John Allen, Poe had distanced himself from the architecture of business, instead redoubling his connection with the art of literature and the commonwealth of poetic script. After excelling, but subsequently retiring, in his educational field at the University of Virginia, …show more content…

Upon reading such, one is able to identify an underlying theme through the lines of dialogue and representation of morality and clueful intuition, being that of the analytical sense of an inexperienced person within a foreign reputation and that of justice, in the most literal sense. Duplin, having fallen from hierarchy without much of a detailed background, takes up a calling that involves investigating a grisly murder scene of two women in a Paris apartment (self.gutenberg.org). Having only the narrator and his faithful wits by his side, they are both able to institutionalize an analytical construct that all other characters, mainly police officers and other detectives in the story, were not even close in achieving. The contrast of ingenuity versus analysis shines through especially when analysis is victorious in the end. Justice also plays a vital role in any detective, crime solving, mystery, even in the modern age of television and story-write. Every character plays a pawn in a game of evildoing as the centerpiece of rightful creed apprehends not a human, but in fact an animal that had committed such a flagrant crime against humanity, as in the story an escaped orangutan, or an Ourang-Outang as referred to in the story, ends up being the culprit in the brutal executions of two innocent women in their own home (Poe 305).