Many people have heard of the superstition that black cats are evil. Some people in the world today do not trust a black cat because of the fact they don’t want terrible luck or evil to deal in their life. In Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Black Cat” there is no difference at all. The narrator keep a terrible life with his black cat and with his drinking problem that changed his life. Not stopping the drinking, doing harmful things to the cat, and beginning to not like the animal. He drank all day and then he wanted to do something evil. But when the narrator went up stairs to cut kill the cat… Then the cat never came back, the narrator waited and waited and still no black cat. In “The Black Cat” Edgar Allan Poe uses the color black to symbolise the cat. …show more content…
The cat bring bad luck for the narrator. “I began to hurt my Pluto”(1). The cat showed it evilness when, “I had to it- I could not stop myself, I did it YES”! “I did it because it was evil”(2). The cat left for a long time and never came back, “I could not forgettable the black shape for months”(2). He could not forget it because it was his main problem. Poe uses revealing action to express the black cat. “I was often doing horrible things to our animals”(1). The narrator did thing he could believe himself doing to his animals for example cutting a eye out. He got tired of the cat cat for one reason, “I don’t know why but I hated the way he loved me”(2). The narrator “grew more more selfish”(1). He shows his selfishness when he wants nothing to do with the black cat . The black cat tried to hurt the narrator when he went downstairs to cut some wood. They make a connection from the cat brings bad luck and that why he almost fell from the