Threshold Roderick's bedchamber.
He dies of fear when he comes face to face with his twin sister Madeline, who had returned to the house after having been put in her tomb alive. madeline fell on roderick
Madeline suffered from catalepsy, a condition where the body becomes rigid and unresponsive. Roderick believed that she had died and placed her in the vault, unaware that she was still alive when he buried her. The shock and horror of discovering this likely contributed to Roderick's decline in mental health.
In Edgar Allan Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher," Madeline's illness is characterized by a cataleptic state, where she appears dead but is not truly deceased. Roderick Usher, her brother, is deeply affected by her condition and fears the possibility of premature burial. After her apparent death, he places her in a vault to prevent any chance of her being buried alive, reflecting his anxieties about her illness and their family's tragic history. This act underscores the themes of death and entrapment that permeate the story.
The Fall of the House of Usher is the story of Roderick Usher, Madeline Usher and Roderick's friend who narrates. The friend arrives at Roderick's request because of an illness Usher is experiencing. Roderick tells his friend that Madeline, his sister, is also sick. Madeline later dies and Roderick asks the narrator's help to place her in a tomb inside the house until she's buried permanently. One stormy night while his friend is reading to him, Usher reveals that his sister is alive and trying to get out of the tomb. Strange noises are heard and Madeline breaks into the room falling to the floor with Roderick, both dead. The friend flees as the house breaks in two and collapses.
The "helpless victim" is Madeline Usher, the twin sister of Roderick Usher, because she was buried alive. She was unable to resist the entombment because she suffers from bouts of catalepsy, where she is unable to move. Roderick Usher tells the narrator that she has died and it appears so to the narrator, so they put her into a coffin and entomb her in the family vault in the basement. The narrator believes she is dead but remarks that her face still has a faint blush and a lingering smile. Over the next few days, the narrator hears noises from the basement but does nothing about it. In time he realizes that they have buried her alive. She had been in the grip of a cataleptic seizure which made it impossible for her to resist the burial. That explains why she still had a blush to her face. Thus, Madeline was helpless to avoid being victimized by Roderick Usher entombing her while she was still alive.
Lady's eyesight
no not at all. but she almost dies by a fight im guessing. im saying the wrong stuff cause im bored. i might type in the real awnser but im not sure if i will put the truth on.
It dies.
it dies
You can put many adjectives in front of lady. But the word ''lady'' doesn't have a pacific adjective.
It dies.
He dies. WHAT ELSE SHOLD BE PUT!