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Montresor is considered an unreliable character in Edgar Allan Poe's short story "The Cask of Amontillado." He deceives and manipulates his victim, Fortunato, leading him into a trap under false pretenses. Montresor's narration of events is biased and serves his own vengeful motives, making him an untrustworthy narrator.
Some may argue that Montresor's revenge in Edgar Allan Poe's "The Cask of Amontillado" is justified due to the perceived insult he received from Fortunato. However, others may see his actions as extreme and disproportionate to the offense. Ultimately, whether his revenge is justified is subjective and open to individual interpretation.
The structure of Edgar Allan Poe's short story "The Cask of Amontillado" suggests Montresor's deceptive nature and manipulation of events. The story unfolds through Montresor's unreliable narration, as he recounts his plan to seek revenge on Fortunato. This creates a sense of ambiguity and manipulation, highlighting Montresor's ability to control both the narrative and the perception of events.
Unreliable narrator. The usual example of this is 'The Cask of Amontillado' by Edgar Alan Poe, wherein the narrator Montresor is progressively seen as been mad rather than credible.
The hook is knowing that Montresor plans on exacting the perfect revenge on Fortunato and reading further to see if he actually does it. Montresor states in the opening that a wrong is not avenged unless the avenger is not caught and that the person who committed the offense must know he is now paying for that offense. The reader gets hooked into continuing into the story to see if Montresor will actually commit the perfect crime and how he will do it.
Seeking revenge through violence is never justified. Killing Fortunato would have been a cruel and inhumane act, perpetuating a cycle of violence and harm. Montresor's actions should have focused on seeking forgiveness and reconciliation instead.
Montresor does not express any explicit regrets for his actions in Edgar Allan Poe's short story "The Cask of Amontillado." Instead, he views his actions as justified and as a form of revenge for the perceived insult he received from Fortunato.
Yes, there is an oxymoron in "The Cask of Amontillado" when Montresor describes Fortunato as "my friend." This is an oxymoron because Montresor's actions and intentions towards Fortunato are malicious and vengeful, not those of a true friend.
Montresor feels that he's gotten well-deserved revenge. Fortunato wronged him in the past, and Montresor even tells him that his family motto is, basically, that no one gets away with wronging anyone in his family. So, he feels justified in that Fortunato deserves the damage done.
No. To begin with it is likely that the thousand injuries and insults that Montresor says he has suffered from Fortunato were figments of his imagination. No details of them are given and Fortunato acts very friendly toward Montresor and has no fear of him even while deep down in the cellar. Fortunato does not act like a person who would have committed so many wrongs to Montresor. Even if Fortunato had insulted Montresor, insults are not reason to murder another person.
Montresor is an unreliable narrator because there are indications that he is either insane or the possessor of an overactive imagination. The indications come from Montresor's words and Fortunato's actions. Montresor begins the story by telling that he has suffered a thousand injuries at the hand of Fortunato , but now Fortunato has also insulted him. For that, Montresor seeks revenge and plans to murder Fortunato. The problem is that Montresor gives no details of these injuries or insults, leaving the reader to wonder if he is imagining all of it. Another indication that no such behavior ever occurred is found in Fortunato's behavior when he runs into Montresor at the carnival. Fortunato is friendly and gracious. He offers to leave the carnival to help Montresor test this Amontillado Montresor says he might have. In the cellar Fortunato suspects nothing untoward from Montresor even though they discuss Montresor's family motto which is that they will not allow anyone to insult the family. Surely, if Fortunato had acted so badly toward Montresor he would not have offered his help and would not have been so blind to the possibility that Montresor would uphold the family honor deep down in the cellar where Montresor could exact revenge with no one knowing about it. And that is just what happens.
David Montresor's birth name is David Edward Montresor Read.