"The Pit and the Pendulum" is a very well written suspense story.
Personally I am not a fan of the ending, as I expected something more
dramatic to happen, but I like how it is unexpected. Edgar Allan Poe's
short story can definitely be classified as Dark Romanticism. The poem
has supernatural happenings, which is a characteristic of Dark
Romanticism writing. The narrator is imprisoned in Toledo by
the Spanish Inquisition and sees angels and judges that morph from
candles and sounds (Poe 263-264). The supernatural visions that the
narrator (he needs a name, the reader becomes very invested in the
emotions and thoughts of this man, but lack the personal connection of a
name) envisions follow the Dark Romanticism model. In this short story
the narrator vividly imagines how he will die in the prison. He goes
through many different types of death including buried alive, falling
into a deep pit, being burned alive in an autos-da-fé ceremony, or later
being chopped up (Poe 263-266). The unnamed narrator builds up the
suspense of the story by vividly describing the scenarios. The great
detail of the scenarios is another characteristic of Dark Romanticism.
The constant loom of death also is a classic Dark Romanticism trait. The narrator is consumed with different ways the
Inquisition can kill him, and by the end of the story, ways that he can
thwart their plans. The weirdly, very uncharacteristic, Poe short story
ending is happy, unexpected, but happy. The unnamed narrator is saved by
General Lasalle, the "enemy of the Inquisition", who pulls him away
from the deep pit as the narrator was about to fall in (Poe 273). Hats
off to General Lasalle for having amazing timing entering this
particular dungeon with a man about to fall to his death, saving him in
the nick of time. That takes some skill. But as this is a work of
fiction, I know there is a high probability that General Lasalle did not
grab a falling man over a pit of death. The happy ending is a
Romanticism writing quality that is rarely used by the master of horror
stories, Edgar Allan Poe.
Psychologically, the
unnamed narrator is in a hallucination state where he does not know what
is real and what is not (Poe 263-267). "it moves the character into a concrete dilemma that seems to "stand
for" a metaphysical situation in an ambiguous way that suggests its
"dreamy," "indeterminate" nature. (May). That psychological state is an
unstable one, which explains why the narrator keeps having mirage like
visions and is sometimes unable to distinguish what actually happening "Days passed - it might have been that many days passed" when
the pendulum was swinging above the unnamed prisoner narrator (Poe 269).
He also had a "full memory of the trial, of the judges, of the sable
draperies, of the sentence, of the sickness, of the swoon" after he
'saw' judges and angels in the shadow of imaginary candles (Poe 265).
Then the next thought that the narrator has is "then entire
forgetfulness of all that followed; ... have enabled me vaguely to
recall" (Poe 265). The unnamed narrator can't differentiate between
reality and the nightmare that he could possibly be having. The fear of
being in the Toledo prison could have triggered some sort of
subconscious response that the narrator used by creating false realities
and to not be able to tell what is real. Poe did a good job
portraying the narrator in a suspenseful way that has the reader
guessing if what the narrator claims as true is truly what happened.
Poe, Edgar Allan. "The Pit and the Pendulum." Comp. Jeffrey D.
Wilhelm, Ph.D. and Douglas Fisher, Ph.D. Glencoe Literature. American
Literature ed. Columbus: McGraw-Hill Companies, 2009. 263-273.
Print.
May, Charles E. "Alternate Realms of Reality." In Edgar Allan Poe: A Study of Short Fiction. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1991, pp. 96–97. Quoted as "Dreams and Reality in the Story" in Harold Bloom, ed. Edgar Allan Poe, Bloom's Major Short Story Writers. Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishing, 1998. (Updated 2007.) Bloom's Literary Reference Online.
Facts On File, Inc.
http://www.fofweb.com/activelink2.asp?ItemID=WE54&SID=5&iPin=
BMSSEP39&SingleRecord=True (accessed November 6, 2012).
No comments:
Post a Comment