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Přidal Fewepoxy dne 10-09-2012 00:37
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My Homepage Close this window For the most captivating daily read, Make Yahoo! We read the story in english, but my teacher didn't explain it at all. Member since: May 15, 2011 Total points: 2,085 (Level 3) Add Contact Block Best Answer - Chosen by Voters The MC Montressor has some grudge against a man named Fortunato (sorry if the names are spelled wrong. Other Answers (1) by? Member since: November 12, 2011 Total points: 521 (Level 2) Add Contact Block Okay, I read this the beginning of this year (9th grade). There is a narrorator that was wronged by Fortunato and he wants revenge.
It is set in 19th century Italy and concerns the deadly revenge taken by the insane narrator on a friend who he claims has insulted him. Like several of Poe's stories, and in keeping with the 19th century fascination with the subject, the narrative revolves around a person being buried alive. As in The Black Cat and The Tell-Tale Heart, Poe tells the story from the murderer's point of view. Angry over some unspecified insult, he plots to murder his friend, then finds the perfect opportunity to carry out his plan when he finds him drunk and wearing motley at the carnival. When Montresor fails to recognise the gesture, Fortunato says "You are not of the masons" - whereupon Montresor displays a trowel he's been hiding. Fortunato enters, and, drunk and unsuspecting, doesn't resist as Montresor quickly chains him to the wall.

In the last few sentences, we learn that Montresor has never been caught, and Fortunato's body still hangs from its chains in the niche where he left it so many years before. The murderer, obviously unrepentant, ends the story by quipping: In pace requiescat! Stephen King's "Dolan's Cadillac" (from the 1993 collection Nightmares and Dreamscapes), is arguably a modern version of the same story. King even includes some nods in the original work's direction: as he finishes burying the eponymous car, Robinson, the main character, says he is "trying to be as neat as a mason laying a wall... King even describes the character as "Poe-like" in his explanation of the story's origins, but doesn't directly admit "The Cask of Amontillado" as an inspiration. Unlike Poe, however, King makes his protagonist sympathetic.
Robinson is given a plausible reason for revenge (the death of his wife), the lengthy planning and preparations he takes are shown, and he fears that Dolan will return from the dead to kill him. The story also bears comparison with James Thurber's "The Catbird Seat," another tale of perfect (although nonlethal) revenge for a rather minor slight. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's short story "The Lost Catacomb" has a plot which is virtually identical to Poe's tale. In the short story "Usher II" by Ray Bradbury (from The Martian Chronicles), the main character exacts revenge on a posh, censoring society (censorship is a major theme in Bradbury's works) using methods from various books. He ends by sealing an FBI-type agent in the catacombs below the house. He then taunts the agent, urging him to quote the story.

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