One of the man's eyes resembled a vulture, which drove the narrator to his actions.
He thought the man's eye looked like a vulture.
By seeming to be insane, the narrator convinces the reader that the murder could have been made for something as trivial as the landlord's eye; that the narrator could have cut up and hid the body and that he could have actually heard the sound of a dead heart beating under the floorboards. In other words, such strange and incredible occurrences were the result of a deranged mind.
The narrator fears the neighbors will hear the beating of the old man's heart.
it is the narrator for both because he is the main person and he is the one who killed the old man. but i dont know what the old man is i used it for my report and i didnt get points taken off. so i should be right good luck!
I would assume he was quite afraid. In the story, when he hears the narrator's finger slip on the lantern, he bolts up in bed, probably in fear. The fact that he stayed sitting up for so long after means he was probably too scared to return to sleep. When the narrator does leap into the room, the old man does get out a scream before he is pulled out of bed and killed.
I could only assume loving thy neighbor.
He said that the elderly man had an evil eye. That was his reason.
A neighbor capturing ducks
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.
The cast of Neighbor Pests - 1947 includes: Pete Smith as Pete Smith - Narrator
The cast of The Neighbor Next Door - 1951 includes: Marvin Miller as (narrator)
Bob. Bob. Bob. Bob.
because he or she dont like his vulture eye
A neighbor reported he heard a scream.
Pine trees
Love your neighbor as you love yourself
In French, the word for neighbor is "voisin".
In "The Tell-Tale Heart," the narrator believes the neighbor is insane because of the old man's distorted eye, which unsettles and terrifies him. The neighbor's appearance and behavior contribute to the narrator's perception of madness, leading to his eventual violent actions.