Fortunato and Montresor are wearing costumes because they are attending a carnival celebration. The setting of Edgar Allan Poe's "The Cask of Amontillado" takes place during the carnival season in Italy, and wearing costumes is a customary practice during such festivities. The costumes add to the sense of disguise and deception in the story.
Both Fortunato and Montresor are depicted as prideful characters. They both show a sense of arrogance and self-importance in the story. Additionally, they both have a strong desire for revenge, leading to the main conflict in the narrative.
One thing that is similar about Montresor and Fortunato in The Cask of Amontillado is that they both are single minded about their pursuit of something. Montresor is in pursuit of killing Fortunato and Fortunato is in pursuit of the amontillado.
Pride is a characteristic shared by both men. Montresor's pride is wounded by Fortunato's insults, leading him to seek revenge. Fortunato's pride and arrogance make him dismiss the danger he's in, ultimately leading to his downfall.
They are both connoisseurs of wines. Montresor states that while Fortunato is a quack when it comes to paintings and gemmary, he does know his wine. Montresor then says that he himself also knows his wines and is a frequent purchaser of many vintages.
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.
It seems to me that the rising action would be when Montresor talks about amontillado that he got and luchesi in front of Fortunato which immediately makes Fortunato want to check it out because he thinks of himself as a wine connoisseur and does not want to miss out. What the reader and Montresor knows that Fortunato does not is that its all a trick to get Fortunato killed. E.B.
The climax of "The Cask of Amontillado" comes when Montresor walls Fortunato up in a niche in the wall of the catacombs. Fortunato's drunkeness is beginning to wear off, and he realizes Montresor's intent. When he moans, he is no longer in a drunken stupor, but acknowledging his fate. As Montresor places the last brick in the wall, he thrusts a torch behind the wall and the only response was the jingling of bells from Fortunato's costume. At this point, Fortunato is dead (possibly from a heart attack from the shock), and there is no going back for Montresor.
In Edgar Allan Poe's "The Cask of Amontillado," both Fortunato and Montresor exhibit a strong sense of pride, particularly regarding their expertise in wine. However, their motivations differ significantly: Montresor is driven by a desire for revenge against Fortunato for perceived insults, while Fortunato is portrayed as oblivious to the danger he faces, driven by his own pride and ambition to prove his wine connoisseurship. Ultimately, Montresor is calculating and manipulative, whereas Fortunato is unsuspecting and naive, leading to a tragic and ironic conclusion.
An interesting question.Montresor is both protagonist and antagonist. He is the protagonist as he is the point of view character and the one that carries the plot. He is the antagonist as he is the one that is antagonizing the situation - the one whom the reader hope will fail in his murderous scheme.An interesting question.Montresor is both protagonist and antagonist. He is the protagonist as he is the point of view character and the one that carries the plot. He is the antagonist as he is the one that is antagonizing the situation - the one whom the reader hope will fail in his murderous scheme.The antagonist is Fortunato.
Verbal irony is when words express something contrary to the truth. In "The Cask of Amontillado," Montresor's friendly and cordial language towards Fortunato while he is leading him to his demise is an example of verbal irony. Montresor's words convey friendship and concern, yet his true intentions are deceitful and malevolent.
Montresor uses the cask, or wine, as bait to lure Forunato into the catacombs. Once they are both in there, Montresor is able to murder Fortunato; in the end, there really was no cask.
Montresor is the protagonist, because he is the main character and narrator, even though he is an evil minded, perhaps demented, person who murders Fortunato. Normally the protagonist is both the main character AND the hero of the story. Although Montresor is the main character, he certainly is no hero for planning and carrying out a murder.