![]() Eventually, however, he grows preoccupied by a fear of discovery. I knew, too, that his apartment was narrow and ill-ventilated.” The ruse works, and the victim is declared dead by an act of God.įor many years, the narrator enjoys his inheritance and the life it affords. ![]() He finally hits upon the notion of using a poisoned candle in the victim’s room, since “I knew my victim’s habit of reading in bed. The narrator goes on to reveal that he plotted murder “for many weeks and months” in order to gain a large inheritance from his victim. The narrator also blames the Imp for his current circumstances: he is in a prison cell, condemned to be executed for murder. The narrator refers to this impulse as “ the Imp of the Perverse.” The sensation of standing at the edge of a cliff and feeling the need to jump, for instance, comes from the Imp. Some such impulses, the narrator maintains, are actively harmful-they drive a person to “perversely” do what they know they shouldn’t do. Phrenology assumes human impulses to be beneficial and sent by God (the periodic need to eat, for instance), but the narrator insists that darker impulses exist that can even override the need for self-preservation. He denounces various methods of evaluating human psychology, such as phrenology, because they do not adequately deal with the concept of a certain impulse. ![]() The “Imp of the Perverse” begins with a meditation on the narrator’s peculiar philosophy. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |