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The Tell-Tale Heart

"The Tell-Tale Heart" is a short story by American writer Edgar Allan Poe, first published in 1843. It is told by an unnamed narrator who endeavors to convince the reader of the narrator's sanity while simultaneously describing a murder the narrator committed. The victim was an old man with a filmy pale blue "vulture-eye", as the narrator calls it. The narrator emphasizes the careful calculation of the murder, attempting the perfect crime, complete with dismembering the body in the bathtub and hiding it under the floorboards. Ultimately, the narrator's actions result in hearing a thumping sound, which the narrator interprets as the dead man's beating heart.

"The Tell-Tale Heart"
Short story by Edgar Allan Poe
The Pioneer, Vol. I, No. I, Drew and Scammell, Philadelphia, January, 1843
Text available at Wikisource
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Genre(s)Horror, Gothic Literature
Publication
Published inThe Pioneer
Publication typePeriodical
PublisherJames Russell Lowell
Media typePrint (periodical)
Publication dateJanuary 1843

The story was first published in James Russell Lowell's The Pioneer in January 1843. "The Tell-Tale Heart" is often considered a classic of the Gothic fiction genre and is one of Poe's best known short stories.

The specific motivation for murder (aside from the narrator's hatred of the old man's eye), the relationship between narrator and old man, the gender of the narrator, and other details are left unclear. The narrator denies having any feelings of hatred or resentment for the man who had, as stated, "never wronged" the narrator. The narrator also denies having killed for greed.

Critics have speculated that the old man could be a father figure, the narrator's landlord, or that the narrator works for the old man as a servant, and that perhaps his "vulture-eye" represents a veiled secret or power. The ambiguity and lack of details about the two main characters stand in contrast to the specific plot details leading up to the murder.

Plot summary edit

 
Illustration by Harry Clarke, 1919

"The Tell-Tale Heart" is a first-person narrative told by an unnamed narrator. Despite insisting that they are sane, the narrator suffers from a disease (nervousness) which causes "over-acuteness of the senses".

The old man, with whom the narrator lives, has a clouded, pale, blue "vulture-like" eye, which distresses and manipulates the narrator so much that they plot to murder the old man, despite also insisting that the narrator loves the old man and has never felt wronged by him. The narrator is insistent that this careful precision in committing the murder proves that they cannot possibly be insane. For seven nights, the narrator opens the door of the old man's room to shine a sliver of light onto the "evil eye." However, the old man's vulture-eye is always closed, making it impossible to "do the work," thus making the narrator go further into distress.

On the eighth night, the old man awakens after the narrator's hand slips and makes a noise, interrupting the narrator's nightly ritual. The narrator does not draw back and after some time, decides to open the lantern. A single thin ray of light shines out and lands precisely on the "evil eye," revealing that it is wide open. The narrator hears the old man's heart beating, which only gets louder and louder. This increases the narrator's anxiety to the point where they decide to strike. They jump into the room and the old man shrieks once before he is killed. The narrator then dismembers the body and conceals the pieces under the floorboards, ensuring the concealment of all signs of the crime. Even so, the old man's scream during the night causes a neighbor to summon the police, who the narrator invites in to look around. The narrator claims that the scream heard was their own in a nightmare and that the old man is absent in the country. Confident that they will not find any evidence of the murder, the narrator brings chairs for them and they sit in the old man's room. The chairs are placed on the very spot where the body is concealed; the police suspect nothing, and the narrator has a pleasant and easy manner.

The narrator begins to feel uncomfortable and notices a ringing in their ears. As the ringing grows louder, the narrator concludes that it is the heartbeat of the old man coming from under the floorboards. The sound increases steadily to the narrator, though the officers do not seem to hear it. Terrified by the violent beating of the heart and convinced that the officers are aware of not only the heartbeat but also the narrator's guilt, the narrator breaks down and confesses. The narrator tells them to tear up the floorboards to reveal the remains of the old man's body.

Publication history edit

 
"The Tell-Tale Heart" in The Pioneer: A Literary and Critical Magazine, page 29

"The Tell-Tale Heart" was first published in January 1843 in the inaugural issue of The Pioneer: A Literary and Critical Magazine, a short-lived Boston magazine edited by James Russell Lowell and Robert Carter who were listed as the "proprietors" on the front cover. The magazine was published in Boston by Leland and Whiting and in Philadelphia by Drew and Scammell.

Poe was likely paid $10 for the story.[1] Its original publication included an epigraph that quoted Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem "A Psalm of Life."[2] The story was slightly revised when republished on August 23, 1845, edition of the Broadway Journal. That edition omitted Longfellow's poem because Poe believed it was plagiarized.[2] "The Tell-Tale Heart" was reprinted several more times during Poe's lifetime.[3]

Analysis edit

"The Tell-Tale Heart" uses an unreliable narrator. The exactness with which the narrator recounts murdering the old man, as if the stealthy way in which they executed the crime were evidence of their sanity, reveals their monomania and paranoia. The focus of the story is the perverse scheme to commit the perfect crime.[4] One author, Paige Bynum, asserts that Poe wrote the narrator in a way that "allows the reader to identify with the narrator".[5]

The narrator of "The Tell-Tale Heart" is generally assumed to be a male. However, some critics have suggested a woman may be narrating; no pronouns are used to clarify one way or the other.[6] The story starts in medias res, opening with a conversation already in progress between the narrator and another person who is not identified in any way. It has been speculated that the narrator is confessing to a prison warden, a judge, a reporter, a doctor, or a psychiatrist.[7] In any case, the narrator tells the story in great detail.[8] What follows is a study of terror but, more specifically, the memory of terror as the narrator is retelling events from the past.[9] The first word of the story, "True!", is an admission of their guilt, as well as an assurance of reliability.[7] This introduction also serves to gain the reader's attention.[10] Every word contributes to the purpose of moving the story forward, exemplifying Poe's theories about the writing of short stories.[11]

The story is driven not by the narrator's insistence upon their "innocence," but by their insistence on their sanity. This, however, is self-destructive, because in attempting to prove their sanity, they fully admit that they are guilty of murder.[12] Their denial of insanity is based on their systematic actions and their precision, as they provide a rational explanation for irrational behavior.[8] This rationality, however, is undermined by their lack of motive ("Object there was none. Passion there was none"). Despite this, they say, the idea of murder "haunted me day and night."[12] It is difficult to fully understand the narrator's true emotions about the blue-eyed man because of this contradiction. It is said that "At the same time he disclosed a deep psychological confusion", referring to the narrator and the comment that "Object there was none. Passion there was none" and that the idea of murder "haunted me day and night."[13]

The story's final scene shows the result of the narrator's feelings of guilt. Like many characters in Gothic fiction, they allow their nerves to dictate their nature. Despite their best efforts at defending their actions, their "over-acuteness of the senses"; which helps them hear the heart beating beneath the floorboards, is evidence that they are truly mad.[14] The guilt in the narrator can be seen when the narrator confessed to the police that the body of the old man was under the floorboards. Even though the old man was dead, the body and heart of the dead man still seemed to haunt the narrator and convict them of the act. "Since such processes of reasoning tend to convict the speaker of madness, it does not seem out of keeping that he is driven to confession", according to scholar Arthur Robinson.[13] Poe's contemporaries may well have been reminded of the controversy over the insanity defense in the 1840s.[15] The confession can be due to a concept called "Illusion of transparency". According to the "Encyclopedia of Social Psychology", "Poe's character falsely believes that some police officers can sense his guilt and anxiety over a crime he has committed, a fear that ultimately gets the best of him and causes him to give himself up unnecessarily".[16]

The narrator claims to have a disease that causes hypersensitivity. A similar motif is used for Roderick Usher in "The Fall of the House of Usher" (1839) and in "The Colloquy of Monos and Una" (1841).[17] It is unclear, however, if the narrator actually has very acute senses, or if it is merely imagined. If this condition is believed to be true, what is heard at the end of the story may not be the old man's heart, but deathwatch beetles. The narrator first admits to hearing deathwatch beetles in the wall after startling the old man from his sleep. According to superstition, deathwatch beetles are a sign of impending death. One variety of deathwatch beetle raps its head against surfaces, presumably as part of a mating ritual, while others emit ticking sounds.[17] Henry David Thoreau observed in an 1838 article that deathwatch beetles make sounds similar to a heartbeat.[18] The discrepancy with this theory is that the deathwatch beetles make a "uniformly faint" ticking sound that would have kept at a consistent pace but as the narrator drew closer to the old man the sound got more rapid and louder which would not have been a result of the beetles.[19] The beating could even be the sound of the narrator's own heart. Alternatively, if the beating is a product of the narrator's imagination, it is that uncontrolled imagination that leads to their own destruction.[20]

It is also possible that the narrator has paranoid schizophrenia. Paranoid schizophrenics very often experience auditory hallucinations. These auditory hallucinations are more often voices, but can also be sounds.[21] The hallucinations do not need to derive from a specific source other than one's head, which is another indication that the narrator is suffering from such a psychological disorder.[19]

The relationship between the old man and the narrator is ambiguous. Their names, occupations, and places of residence are not given, contrasting with the strict attention to detail in the plot.[22] The narrator may be a servant of the old man's or, as is more often assumed, his child. In that case, the "vulture-eye" of the old man as a father figure may symbolize parental surveillance or the paternal principles of right and wrong. The murder of the eye, then, is removal of conscience.[23] The eye may also represent secrecy: only when the eye is found open on the final night, penetrating the veil of secrecy, is the murder carried out.[24]

Richard Wilbur suggested that the tale is an allegorical representation of Poe's poem "To Science", which depicts a struggle between imagination and science. In "The Tell-Tale Heart", the old man may thus represent the scientific and rational mind, while the narrator may stand for the imaginative.[25]

Adaptations edit

References edit

  1. ^ Silverman, Kenneth. Edgar A. Poe: Mournful and Never-ending Remembrance. New York: Harper Perennial, 1991. ISBN 0-06-092331-8, p. 201.
  2. ^ a b Moss, Sidney P. Poe's Literary Battles: The Critic in the Context of His Literary Milieu. Southern Illinois University Press, 1969. p. 151
  3. ^ ""The Tales of Edgar Allan Poe" (index)". eapoe.org. The Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore. September 30, 2007. Retrieved 2007-11-05.
  4. ^ Kennedy, J. Gerald. Poe, Death, and the Life of Writing. Yale University Press, 1987. p. 132; ISBN 0-300-03773-2
  5. ^ Bynum, P.M. (1989) "Observe How Healthily – How Calmly I Can Tell You the Whole Story": Moral Insanity and Edgar Allan Poe's 'The Tell-Tale Heart'. In: Amrine F. (eds) Literature and Science as Modes of Expression. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science, vol 115. Springer, Dordrecht. doi:10.1007/978-94-009-2297-6_8.
  6. ^ a b Sova, Dawn B. Edgar Allan Poe: A to Z. New York City: Checkmark Books, 2001: 234. ISBN 0-8160-4161-X
  7. ^ a b Benfey, Christopher. "Poe and the Unreadable: 'The Black Cat' and 'The Tell-Tale Heart'", in New Essays on Poe's Major Tales, Kenneth Silverman, ed. Cambridge University Press, 1993. ISBN 978-0-521-42243-7, p. 30.
  8. ^ a b Cleman, John. "Irresistible Impulses: Edgar Allan Poe and the Insanity Defense", in Bloom's BioCritiques: Edgar Allan Poe, edited by Harold Bloom. Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers, 2002. ISBN 0-7910-6173-6, p. 70.
  9. ^ Quinn, Arthur Hobson. Edgar Allan Poe: A Critical Biography. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-8018-5730-9. p. 394
  10. ^ Meyers, Jeffrey. Edgar Allan Poe: His Life and Legacy. Cooper Square Press, 1992. p. 101. ISBN 0-8154-1038-7
  11. ^ Quinn, Arthur Hobson. Edgar Allan Poe: A Critical Biography. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998. p. 394. ISBN 0-8018-5730-9
  12. ^ a b Robinson, E. Arthur. "Poe's 'The Tell-Tale Heart'" in Twentieth Century Interpretations of Poe's Tales, edited by William L. Howarth. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall Inc., 1971, p. 94.
  13. ^ a b Robinson, E. Arthur (1965). "Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart"". University of California Press. 19 (4): 369–378. doi:10.2307/2932876. JSTOR 2932876.
  14. ^ Fisher, Benjamin Franklin. "Poe and the Gothic Tradition", in The Cambridge Companion to Edgar Allan Poe, edited by Kevin J. Hayes. Cambridge University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-521-79727-6, p. 87.
  15. ^ Cleman, Bloom's BioCritiques, p. 66.
  16. ^ Baumeister, Roy F.; Vohs, Kathleen D. (2007). Encyclopedia of Social Psychology. Thousand Oaks, Calif: Sage Publications, Inc. p. 458. ISBN 9781412916707. ISBN 9781452265681
  17. ^ a b Reilly, John E. "The Lesser Death-Watch and "'The Tell-Tale Heart' December 18, 2009, at the Wayback Machine", in The American Transcendental Quarterly. Second Quarter, 1969.
  18. ^ Robison, E. Arthur. "Thoreau and the Deathwatch in Poe's 'The Tell-Tale Heart'", in Poe Studies, vol. IV, no. 1. June 1971. pp. 14–16
  19. ^ a b Zimmerman, Brett (1992). ""Moral Insanity" or Paranoid Schizophrenia: Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart"". Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature. 25 (2): 39–48. JSTOR 24780617.
  20. ^ Eddings, Dennis W. "Theme and Parody in 'The Raven'", in Poe and His Times: The Artist and His Milieu, edited by Benjamin Franklin Fisher IV. Baltimore: The Edgar Allan Poe Society, 1990. ISBN 0-9616449-2-3, p. 213.
  21. ^ Zimmerman, Brett. "'Moral Insanity' or Paranoid Schizophrenia: Poe's 'The Tell-Tale Heart.'" Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature, vol. 25, no. 2, 1992, pp. 39–48. JSTOR 24780617.
  22. ^ Benfey, New Essays, p. 32.
  23. ^ Hoffman, Daniel. Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1972. ISBN 0-8071-2321-8, p. 223.
  24. ^ Benfey, New Essays, p. 33.
  25. ^ Benfey, New Essays, pp. 31–32.
  26. ^ Workman, Christopher; Howarth, Troy (2016). Tome of Terror: Horror Films of the Silent Era. Midnight Marquee Press. p. 332. ISBN 978-1936168-68-2.
  27. ^ "IMDb Title Search: The Tell-Tale Heart". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2007-09-01.
  28. ^ "Sleep No More", by Bill Gaines and Ed Feldstein, Shock SuspenStories, April 1953.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-05-18. Retrieved 2015-05-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  30. ^ "IndieWire: Watch Robert Eggers Adapt Edgar Allan Poe in Early Short Film 'The Tell-Tale Heart'". 28 April 2022. Retrieved 2022-04-28.
  31. ^ Malvern, Jack (23 October 2018). "Edgar Allen Poe's horror classic The Tell‑Tale Heart back from the dead after attic clear‑out". The Times. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  32. ^ "Poe's Tell-Tale Heart:The Game - Android Apps on Google Play". Play.google.com. Retrieved 2016-01-16.
  33. ^ Traciy Reyes (12 September 2015). "'The Murder Pact': Lifetime Movie, Also Known As 'Tell-Tale Lies', Airs Tonight Featuring Music By Lindsey Stirling". Inquisitr.com. Retrieved 2016-01-16.
  34. ^ Ribeiro, Troy (9 August 2018). "'Redrum: A Love Story': A rehash of skewed love stories (IANS Review, Rating: *1/2)". Business Standard. Retrieved 13 April 2020.
  35. ^ Malvern, Jack (23 October 2018). "Edgar Allen Poe's horror classic The Tell‑Tale Heart back from the dead after attic clear‑out". The Times.
  36. ^ DeMichiei, Lauren (10 June 2022). "That's a wrap! Post production begins on Poe Movies' Tell-Tale Heart". Orionvega Media. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
  37. ^ Axelrod, Joshua (26 September 2022). "Poe comes to life with locally shot version of 'The Tell-Tale Heart'". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 17 October 2022.

External links edit

  • "The Poe Museum"– Full text of "The Tell-Tale Heart"
  • "The Tell-Tale Heart"– Full text of the first printing, from the Pioneer, 1843
  • Mid-20th century radio adaptations of "The Tell-Tale Heart"
  • "The Tell-Tale Heart" study guide and teaching guide– themes, analysis, quotes, teacher resources
  • "The Tell-Tale Heart" animation– Award-winning 2010 animated movie, teacher resources, student games
  • 20 LibriVox audiorecordings, read by various readers
  • The Pioneer, January, 1843, Boston edition.

tell, tale, heart, other, uses, disambiguation, short, story, american, writer, edgar, allan, first, published, 1843, told, unnamed, narrator, endeavors, convince, reader, narrator, sanity, while, simultaneously, describing, murder, narrator, committed, victim. For other uses see The Tell Tale Heart disambiguation The Tell Tale Heart is a short story by American writer Edgar Allan Poe first published in 1843 It is told by an unnamed narrator who endeavors to convince the reader of the narrator s sanity while simultaneously describing a murder the narrator committed The victim was an old man with a filmy pale blue vulture eye as the narrator calls it The narrator emphasizes the careful calculation of the murder attempting the perfect crime complete with dismembering the body in the bathtub and hiding it under the floorboards Ultimately the narrator s actions result in hearing a thumping sound which the narrator interprets as the dead man s beating heart The Tell Tale Heart Short story by Edgar Allan PoeThe Pioneer Vol I No I Drew and Scammell Philadelphia January 1843Text available at WikisourceCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenre s Horror Gothic LiteraturePublicationPublished inThe PioneerPublication typePeriodicalPublisherJames Russell LowellMedia typePrint periodical Publication dateJanuary 1843The story was first published in James Russell Lowell s The Pioneer in January 1843 The Tell Tale Heart is often considered a classic of the Gothic fiction genre and is one of Poe s best known short stories The specific motivation for murder aside from the narrator s hatred of the old man s eye the relationship between narrator and old man the gender of the narrator and other details are left unclear The narrator denies having any feelings of hatred or resentment for the man who had as stated never wronged the narrator The narrator also denies having killed for greed Critics have speculated that the old man could be a father figure the narrator s landlord or that the narrator works for the old man as a servant and that perhaps his vulture eye represents a veiled secret or power The ambiguity and lack of details about the two main characters stand in contrast to the specific plot details leading up to the murder Contents 1 Plot summary 2 Publication history 3 Analysis 4 Adaptations 5 References 6 External linksPlot summary edit nbsp Illustration by Harry Clarke 1919 The Tell Tale Heart is a first person narrative told by an unnamed narrator Despite insisting that they are sane the narrator suffers from a disease nervousness which causes over acuteness of the senses The old man with whom the narrator lives has a clouded pale blue vulture like eye which distresses and manipulates the narrator so much that they plot to murder the old man despite also insisting that the narrator loves the old man and has never felt wronged by him The narrator is insistent that this careful precision in committing the murder proves that they cannot possibly be insane For seven nights the narrator opens the door of the old man s room to shine a sliver of light onto the evil eye However the old man s vulture eye is always closed making it impossible to do the work thus making the narrator go further into distress On the eighth night the old man awakens after the narrator s hand slips and makes a noise interrupting the narrator s nightly ritual The narrator does not draw back and after some time decides to open the lantern A single thin ray of light shines out and lands precisely on the evil eye revealing that it is wide open The narrator hears the old man s heart beating which only gets louder and louder This increases the narrator s anxiety to the point where they decide to strike They jump into the room and the old man shrieks once before he is killed The narrator then dismembers the body and conceals the pieces under the floorboards ensuring the concealment of all signs of the crime Even so the old man s scream during the night causes a neighbor to summon the police who the narrator invites in to look around The narrator claims that the scream heard was their own in a nightmare and that the old man is absent in the country Confident that they will not find any evidence of the murder the narrator brings chairs for them and they sit in the old man s room The chairs are placed on the very spot where the body is concealed the police suspect nothing and the narrator has a pleasant and easy manner The narrator begins to feel uncomfortable and notices a ringing in their ears As the ringing grows louder the narrator concludes that it is the heartbeat of the old man coming from under the floorboards The sound increases steadily to the narrator though the officers do not seem to hear it Terrified by the violent beating of the heart and convinced that the officers are aware of not only the heartbeat but also the narrator s guilt the narrator breaks down and confesses The narrator tells them to tear up the floorboards to reveal the remains of the old man s body Publication history edit nbsp The Tell Tale Heart in The Pioneer A Literary and Critical Magazine page 29 The Tell Tale Heart was first published in January 1843 in the inaugural issue of The Pioneer A Literary and Critical Magazine a short lived Boston magazine edited by James Russell Lowell and Robert Carter who were listed as the proprietors on the front cover The magazine was published in Boston by Leland and Whiting and in Philadelphia by Drew and Scammell Poe was likely paid 10 for the story 1 Its original publication included an epigraph that quoted Henry Wadsworth Longfellow s poem A Psalm of Life 2 The story was slightly revised when republished on August 23 1845 edition of the Broadway Journal That edition omitted Longfellow s poem because Poe believed it was plagiarized 2 The Tell Tale Heart was reprinted several more times during Poe s lifetime 3 Analysis edit The Tell Tale Heart uses an unreliable narrator The exactness with which the narrator recounts murdering the old man as if the stealthy way in which they executed the crime were evidence of their sanity reveals their monomania and paranoia The focus of the story is the perverse scheme to commit the perfect crime 4 One author Paige Bynum asserts that Poe wrote the narrator in a way that allows the reader to identify with the narrator 5 The narrator of The Tell Tale Heart is generally assumed to be a male However some critics have suggested a woman may be narrating no pronouns are used to clarify one way or the other 6 The story starts in medias res opening with a conversation already in progress between the narrator and another person who is not identified in any way It has been speculated that the narrator is confessing to a prison warden a judge a reporter a doctor or a psychiatrist 7 In any case the narrator tells the story in great detail 8 What follows is a study of terror but more specifically the memory of terror as the narrator is retelling events from the past 9 The first word of the story True is an admission of their guilt as well as an assurance of reliability 7 This introduction also serves to gain the reader s attention 10 Every word contributes to the purpose of moving the story forward exemplifying Poe s theories about the writing of short stories 11 The story is driven not by the narrator s insistence upon their innocence but by their insistence on their sanity This however is self destructive because in attempting to prove their sanity they fully admit that they are guilty of murder 12 Their denial of insanity is based on their systematic actions and their precision as they provide a rational explanation for irrational behavior 8 This rationality however is undermined by their lack of motive Object there was none Passion there was none Despite this they say the idea of murder haunted me day and night 12 It is difficult to fully understand the narrator s true emotions about the blue eyed man because of this contradiction It is said that At the same time he disclosed a deep psychological confusion referring to the narrator and the comment that Object there was none Passion there was none and that the idea of murder haunted me day and night 13 The story s final scene shows the result of the narrator s feelings of guilt Like many characters in Gothic fiction they allow their nerves to dictate their nature Despite their best efforts at defending their actions their over acuteness of the senses which helps them hear the heart beating beneath the floorboards is evidence that they are truly mad 14 The guilt in the narrator can be seen when the narrator confessed to the police that the body of the old man was under the floorboards Even though the old man was dead the body and heart of the dead man still seemed to haunt the narrator and convict them of the act Since such processes of reasoning tend to convict the speaker of madness it does not seem out of keeping that he is driven to confession according to scholar Arthur Robinson 13 Poe s contemporaries may well have been reminded of the controversy over the insanity defense in the 1840s 15 The confession can be due to a concept called Illusion of transparency According to the Encyclopedia of Social Psychology Poe s character falsely believes that some police officers can sense his guilt and anxiety over a crime he has committed a fear that ultimately gets the best of him and causes him to give himself up unnecessarily 16 The narrator claims to have a disease that causes hypersensitivity A similar motif is used for Roderick Usher in The Fall of the House of Usher 1839 and in The Colloquy of Monos and Una 1841 17 It is unclear however if the narrator actually has very acute senses or if it is merely imagined If this condition is believed to be true what is heard at the end of the story may not be the old man s heart but deathwatch beetles The narrator first admits to hearing deathwatch beetles in the wall after startling the old man from his sleep According to superstition deathwatch beetles are a sign of impending death One variety of deathwatch beetle raps its head against surfaces presumably as part of a mating ritual while others emit ticking sounds 17 Henry David Thoreau observed in an 1838 article that deathwatch beetles make sounds similar to a heartbeat 18 The discrepancy with this theory is that the deathwatch beetles make a uniformly faint ticking sound that would have kept at a consistent pace but as the narrator drew closer to the old man the sound got more rapid and louder which would not have been a result of the beetles 19 The beating could even be the sound of the narrator s own heart Alternatively if the beating is a product of the narrator s imagination it is that uncontrolled imagination that leads to their own destruction 20 It is also possible that the narrator has paranoid schizophrenia Paranoid schizophrenics very often experience auditory hallucinations These auditory hallucinations are more often voices but can also be sounds 21 The hallucinations do not need to derive from a specific source other than one s head which is another indication that the narrator is suffering from such a psychological disorder 19 The relationship between the old man and the narrator is ambiguous Their names occupations and places of residence are not given contrasting with the strict attention to detail in the plot 22 The narrator may be a servant of the old man s or as is more often assumed his child In that case the vulture eye of the old man as a father figure may symbolize parental surveillance or the paternal principles of right and wrong The murder of the eye then is removal of conscience 23 The eye may also represent secrecy only when the eye is found open on the final night penetrating the veil of secrecy is the murder carried out 24 Richard Wilbur suggested that the tale is an allegorical representation of Poe s poem To Science which depicts a struggle between imagination and science In The Tell Tale Heart the old man may thus represent the scientific and rational mind while the narrator may stand for the imaginative 25 Adaptations editSome of this section s listed sources may not be reliable Please help improve this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged and removed January 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The earliest acknowledged adaptation of The Tell Tale Heart was in a 1928 20 minute American silent film of that title 26 co directed by Leon Shamroy and Charles Klein and starring Otto Matieson as The Insane William Herford as The Old Man with Charles Darvas and Hans Fuerberg as Detectives It was faithful to the original tale 6 unlike future television and film adaptations which often expanded the short story to full length feature films 27 unreliable source The earliest known talkie adaptation was a 1934 version filmed at the Blattner Studios Elstree by Clifton Hurst Productions directed by Brian Desmond Hurst and starring Norman Dryden This version was 55 minutes in length A 1941 live action adaptation starred Joseph Schildkraut and was the directorial debut of Jules Dassin This version differs greatly from the original tale depicting the murderer as driven mad after suffering years of abuse by the hateful older man A 1953 animated short film produced by United Productions of America and narrated by James Mason is included among the list of films preserved in the United States National Film Registry Also in 1953 an EC Comics adaptation of The Tell Tale Heart entitled Sleep No More written by William Gaines and Al Feldstein and illustrated by George Evans cartoonist appeared in Shock SuspenStories 28 In 1956 an adaptation of The Tell Tale Heart was written by William Templeton for the NBC Matinee Theater and aired on 6 November 1956 A 1960 film adaptation adds a love triangle to the story An Australian ballet was based on the story and was recorded for television in the early 1960s 29 In 1968 ITV broadcast a television adaptation as part of the horror anthology series Mystery and Imagination No recordings of the production are known to exist In 1970 Vincent Price included a solo recitation of the story in the anthology film An Evening of Edgar Allan Poe A 1971 film adaptation directed by Steve Carver and starring Sam Jaffe as the old man CBS Radio Mystery Theater performed an adaptation of the story in 1975 the cast included Fred Gwynne The Canadian radio program Nightfall presented an adaptation on August 1 1980 A musical adaptation performed by The Alan Parsons Project was released on their 1976 debut album Tales of Mystery and Imagination and was later covered by Slough Feg for their 2010 album The Animal Spirits Steven Berkoff adapted the story in 1991 and was broadcast on British television This adaptation was originally presented on British TV as part of the acclaimed series Without Walls The song Ol Evil Eye off of the 1995 album Riddle Box by the Insane Clown Posse adapts a version of the story as well as sampling audio from a reading of the original story The Radio Tales series produced The Tell Tale Heart for National Public Radio in 1998 The story was performed by Winifred Phillips along with music composed by her The 1999 episode of SpongeBob SquarePants entitled Squeaky Boots loosely adapts the short story In the episode SpongeBob s new boots that squeak with each step stand in for the old man s beating heart Mr Krabs hides the boots under the floorboards of the Krusty Krab The film Nightmares from the Mind of Poe 2006 adapts The Tell Tale Heart along with The Cask of Amontillado The Premature Burial and The Raven In 2008 filmmaker Robert Eggers adapted the story as a short This production was notable for using a lifelike human sized puppet to portray the old man Eggers was largely unknown when he made the short but it garnered attention when he released it online in 2022 after he had achieved some renown as a director of features 30 The 2009 thriller film Tell Tale produced by Ridley Scott and Tony Scott credits Poe s The Tell Tale Heart as the basis for the story of a man being haunted by his donor s memories after a heart transplant 31 unreliable source V H Belvadi s 2012 short film Telltale credits Poe s The Tell tale Heart as its inspiration and uses some dialog from the original work Poe s Tell Tale Heart The Game is a 2013 mobile game adaptation in which players enact the protagonist s actions to recreate Poe s story on Google Play 32 and Apple iOS The 2015 animated anthology Extraordinary Tales includes The Tell Tale Heart narrated by Bela Lugosi The 2015 Lifetime movie The Murder Pact starring Alexa Vega is based on Poe s work and incorporates allusions to it such as the vulture eye from The Tell Tale Heart 33 In April 2016 a film adaption directed by John Le Tier was released entitled The Tell Tale Heart It starred Peter Bogdanovich Rose McGowan and Patrick Flueger in the lead role It featured a full narration of Poe s story with added elements imagining the narrator as a former tortured soldier with PTSD Redrum 2018 an Indian Hindi language film adapts the story 34 In December 2018 Anthony Neilson s stage adaptation was presented at London s National Theatre 35 In September 2022 DijitMedia released an adaptation entitled Edgar Allan Poe s Tell Tale Heart 36 It featured the protagonist as a female house servant to the old man as was common in the United States during the 19th century 37 Elements from The Black Cat were included to highlight the similarities between the actions of the protagonists In October 2023 Tell Tale Heart was loosely adapted for the fifth episode of the Netflix series The Fall of the House of Usher References edit Silverman Kenneth Edgar A Poe Mournful and Never ending Remembrance New York Harper Perennial 1991 ISBN 0 06 092331 8 p 201 a b Moss Sidney P Poe s Literary Battles The Critic in the Context of His Literary Milieu Southern Illinois University Press 1969 p 151 The Tales of Edgar Allan Poe index eapoe org The Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore September 30 2007 Retrieved 2007 11 05 Kennedy J Gerald Poe Death and the Life of Writing Yale University Press 1987 p 132 ISBN 0 300 03773 2 Bynum P M 1989 Observe How Healthily How Calmly I Can Tell You the Whole Story Moral Insanity and Edgar Allan Poe s The Tell Tale Heart In Amrine F eds Literature and Science as Modes of Expression Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science vol 115 Springer Dordrecht doi 10 1007 978 94 009 2297 6 8 a b Sova Dawn B Edgar Allan Poe A to Z New York City Checkmark Books 2001 234 ISBN 0 8160 4161 X a b Benfey Christopher Poe and the Unreadable The Black Cat and The Tell Tale Heart in New Essays on Poe s Major Tales Kenneth Silverman ed Cambridge University Press 1993 ISBN 978 0 521 42243 7 p 30 a b Cleman John Irresistible Impulses Edgar Allan Poe and the Insanity Defense in Bloom s BioCritiques Edgar Allan Poe edited by Harold Bloom Philadelphia Chelsea House Publishers 2002 ISBN 0 7910 6173 6 p 70 Quinn Arthur Hobson Edgar Allan Poe A Critical Biography Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press 1998 ISBN 0 8018 5730 9 p 394 Meyers Jeffrey Edgar Allan Poe His Life and Legacy Cooper Square Press 1992 p 101 ISBN 0 8154 1038 7 Quinn Arthur Hobson Edgar Allan Poe A Critical Biography Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press 1998 p 394 ISBN 0 8018 5730 9 a b Robinson E Arthur Poe s The Tell Tale Heart in Twentieth Century Interpretations of Poe s Tales edited by William L Howarth Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall Inc 1971 p 94 a b Robinson E Arthur 1965 Poe s The Tell Tale Heart University of California Press 19 4 369 378 doi 10 2307 2932876 JSTOR 2932876 Fisher Benjamin Franklin Poe and the Gothic Tradition in The Cambridge Companion to Edgar Allan Poe edited by Kevin J Hayes Cambridge University Press 2002 ISBN 0 521 79727 6 p 87 Cleman Bloom s BioCritiques p 66 Baumeister Roy F Vohs Kathleen D 2007 Encyclopedia of Social Psychology Thousand Oaks Calif Sage Publications Inc p 458 ISBN 9781412916707 ISBN 9781452265681 a b Reilly John E The Lesser Death Watch and The Tell Tale Heart Archived December 18 2009 at the Wayback Machine in The American Transcendental Quarterly Second Quarter 1969 Robison E Arthur Thoreau and the Deathwatch in Poe s The Tell Tale Heart in Poe Studies vol IV no 1 June 1971 pp 14 16 a b Zimmerman Brett 1992 Moral Insanity or Paranoid Schizophrenia Poe s The Tell Tale Heart Mosaic A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature 25 2 39 48 JSTOR 24780617 Eddings Dennis W Theme and Parody in The Raven in Poe and His Times The Artist and His Milieu edited by Benjamin Franklin Fisher IV Baltimore The Edgar Allan Poe Society 1990 ISBN 0 9616449 2 3 p 213 Zimmerman Brett Moral Insanity or Paranoid Schizophrenia Poe s The Tell Tale Heart Mosaic A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature vol 25 no 2 1992 pp 39 48 JSTOR 24780617 Benfey New Essays p 32 Hoffman Daniel Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1972 ISBN 0 8071 2321 8 p 223 Benfey New Essays p 33 Benfey New Essays pp 31 32 Workman Christopher Howarth Troy 2016 Tome of Terror Horror Films of the Silent Era Midnight Marquee Press p 332 ISBN 978 1936168 68 2 IMDb Title Search The Tell Tale Heart Internet Movie Database Retrieved 2007 09 01 Sleep No More by Bill Gaines and Ed Feldstein Shock SuspenStories April 1953 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2016 05 18 Retrieved 2015 05 01 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link IndieWire Watch Robert Eggers Adapt Edgar Allan Poe in Early Short Film The Tell Tale Heart 28 April 2022 Retrieved 2022 04 28 Malvern Jack 23 October 2018 Edgar Allen Poe s horror classic The Tell Tale Heart back from the dead after attic clear out The Times Retrieved 30 November 2018 Poe s Tell Tale Heart The Game Android Apps on Google Play Play google com Retrieved 2016 01 16 Traciy Reyes 12 September 2015 The Murder Pact Lifetime Movie Also Known As Tell Tale Lies Airs Tonight Featuring Music By Lindsey Stirling Inquisitr com Retrieved 2016 01 16 Ribeiro Troy 9 August 2018 Redrum A Love Story A rehash of skewed love stories IANS Review Rating 1 2 Business Standard Retrieved 13 April 2020 Malvern Jack 23 October 2018 Edgar Allen Poe s horror classic The Tell Tale Heart back from the dead after attic clear out The Times DeMichiei Lauren 10 June 2022 That s a wrap Post production begins on Poe Movies Tell Tale Heart Orionvega Media Retrieved 17 October 2022 Axelrod Joshua 26 September 2022 Poe comes to life with locally shot version of The Tell Tale Heart Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved 17 October 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article The Tell Tale Heart nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Tell Tale Heart The Poe Museum Full text of The Tell Tale Heart The Tell Tale Heart Full text of the first printing from the Pioneer 1843 Mid 20th century radio adaptations of The Tell Tale Heart The Tell Tale Heart study guide and teaching guide themes analysis quotes teacher resources The Tell Tale Heart animation Award winning 2010 animated movie teacher resources student games 20 LibriVox audiorecordings read by various readers The Pioneer January 1843 Boston edition Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Tell Tale Heart amp oldid 1217434790, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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