His word selection can fuel images that he conjures to form such gruesome stories to his readers. His word choice is both sophisticated and fully immersed with terrifying connotations, or emotional meanings, and for this story specifically, those connotations evoke fear in the reader. In Edgar Allan Poe’s story, “The Tell-Tale Heart,” he creates the story about a delirious individual and the fascination he is fixated on and infatuated with. The main theme of this story is insanity that collectively enters into the entire story, but the style of writing is in a very gothic tone. The gothic style of writing is described with the help of these elements: supernatural components, abnormal psychological behavior, creating a gloomy or threatening atmosphere, and connections between the setting and his characters’ thought process or behavior. Since Poe uses these topics in this gothic style poem, it constructs the main theme in “The Tell-Tale …show more content…
By having the storyteller grin a gruesome smile in the wake of murdering the old man, Poe makes a vivid image of a raving lunatic in the audience’s thoughts. As the plot thickens, so does the storyteller's derangement. The police came to the narrator's home soon after he had completed the process of discarding the old man's body. Feeling arrogant, the narrator welcomes them in to visit; sitting upon the exact spot of the old man's dismembered body. Hearing what he supposed to be the old man's beating heart, the storyteller's apprehension develops while he is talking with the police. Poe, by and by, demonstrates the to his readers the storyteller's craziness through his subsequent activities, “I foamed – I raved – I swore! I swung my chair upon which I have been sitting, and grated it upon the boards,” (Poe, 1190). The audience can clearly observe the climax of the storyteller's abnormal personality when he really feels that the police can hear the thumping heartbeat too, “they heard! – They suspected! – They knew! – They were making a mockery of my horror!” (Poe,