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Isolation In The Fall Of The House Of Usher

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In the short story The Fall of the House of Usher, Edgar Allen Poe employs the theme that Roderick’s and Madeline’s mind and body gradually annihilates due to their isolation from the world. For instance, the narrator and Roderick know each other from childhood, yet “his [Roderick] reserve had been always excessive and habitual” (Poe, 1). Likewise, after they reacquaint, Roderick persistently maintains the barrier between them. When Roderick reserves to himself, he isolates himself from everyone around him, which hinders his mind and body. Roderick spends a myriad amount of time alone, so he agonizes “from a morbid acuteness of the senses”, due of his lack of human interaction which in consequence affects his mental and physical health (Poe,
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