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The narrator
A person approved for heart transplantation is placed on the heart transplant waiting list of a heart transplant center. All patients on a waiting list are registered with the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS).
The sound that drives the narrator to confess the crime is a heart; (the heart of the man he killed or the his own?)
In "The Tell-Tale Heart" by Edgar Allan Poe, there is a flash forward when the narrator reveals his own sanity and his attempt to prove it to the reader. This technique gives readers a glimpse into the narrator's mindset and the consequences of his actions before the story concludes.
A bad heart would help
Narrator
They have much in common both being unreliable and mad. But to the differences. In the Cask of the Amontillado the narrator is angry and bent on revenge. In the tell-tale heart the narrator is sincere and acts our of paranoia.
Try a mix. My heart lay in waiting for your love, and when your love was earnt, I loved. Now that you're gone, my heart lays bleeding for your love.
The narrator keeps insisting that he is not mad in "The Tell-Tale Heart."
There are two narrators in Heart of Darkness. The first is unknown and the second is Marlow.
The narrator in "The Tell-Tale Heart" is disturbed by his neighbor's pale, vulture-like eye, which he finds unsettling and believes is evil. This eye ultimately becomes the focus of the narrator's obsession and drives him to commit murder.
When the narrator of "The Tell-Tale Heart" said "Dissemble no more," he was telling the old man to stop pretending or trying to hide his fear. The narrator wanted the old man to face the truth of his emotions before he carried out his plan to kill him.