The Black Cat
Genre: Short Story (Gothic)
Author: Edgar Allan Poe
Plot: At first, this image deeply disturbs the narrator, but gradually
he determines a logical explanation for it, that someone outside had cut the
cat from the tree and thrown the dead creature into the bedroom to wake him
during the fire. The narrator begins to miss Pluto, feeling guilty. Some time
later, he finds a similar cat in a tavern. It is the same size and color as the
original and is even missing an eye. The only difference is a large white patch
on the animal's chest. The narrator takes it home, but soon begins to loathe,
even fear the creature. After a time, the white patch of fur begins to take
shape and, to the narrator, forms the shape of the gallows. This terrifies and angers him more, and he avoids the cat
whenever possible. Then, one day when the narrator and his wife are visiting
the cellar in their new home, the cat gets under its master's feet and nearly
trips him down the stairs. Enraged, the man grabs an axe and tries to kill the
cat but is stopped by his wife- whom, out of fury, he kills instead. To conceal
her body he removes bricks from a protrusion in the wall, places her body
there, and repairs the hole. A few days later, when the police show up at the
house to investigate the wife's disappearance, they find nothing and the
narrator goes free. The cat, which he intended to kill as well, has also gone
missing. This grants him the freedom to sleep, even with the burden of murder.
On the last day of the investigation,
the narrator accompanies the police into the cellar. They still find nothing
significant. Then, completely confident in his own safety, the narrator
comments on the sturdiness of the building and raps upon the wall he had built
around his wife's body. A loud, inhuman wailing sound fills the room. The
alarmed police tear down the wall and find the wife's corpse, and on its
rotting head, to the utter horror of the narrator, is the screeching black cat.
As he words it: "I had walled the monster up within the tomb!"
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