The Cask of Amontillado (Poe): Difference between revisions
Created page with "{{written by AI}} {{Summary | Title = The Cask of Amontillado | Author = Edgar Allan Poe | Genre = short story | Year of publication = 1846 | Microsummary = A man named Montresor seeks revenge on his friend Fortunato for an unspecified insult. He lures Fortunato into his wine cellar with the promise of a rare wine, only to bury him alive behind a wall of bricks. | Wikidata = | Wikisource = The Cask of Amontillado }} {{Start of text}} "The Cask of Amontillado" is a sh..." |
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| Title = The Cask of Amontillado | | Title = The Cask of Amontillado | ||
| Author = Edgar Allan Poe | | Author = Edgar Allan Poe | ||
| | | Literary form = short story | ||
| Year of publication = 1846 | | Year of publication = 1846 | ||
| Microsummary = A man | | Microsummary = A man sought revenge on another for an insult by luring him into catacombs under the pretense of verifying a wine's authenticity. He then chained and sealed him inside a niche, leaving him to die. | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Start of text}} | {{Start of text}} | ||
A man named Montresor sought revenge on his acquaintance, Fortunato, for an unspecified insult.{{Quote | |||
| Text = The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as I best could; but when he ventured upon insult, I vowed revenge. | |||
{{Character | | Context = Montresor, the narrator, explains his motivation for seeking revenge on Fortunato. This quote is from the beginning of the story, setting the stage for the events to come. | ||
}}{{Character | |||
| Name = Montresor | | Name = Montresor | ||
| Description = | | Description = narrator; cunning, manipulative, and vengeful | ||
| Emoji = | | Emoji = 🙎🏻♂️ | ||
}} | }}{{Character | ||
| Name = Fortunato | |||
| Description = wine connoisseur; prideful, easily manipulated, and intoxicated | |||
| Emoji = 🥴 | |||
}} Montresor devised a plan to lure Fortunato into his family's catacombs under the pretense of verifying the authenticity of a cask of Amontillado, a rare and valuable wine. Fortunato, a known wine connoisseur, eagerly agreed to accompany Montresor to his vaults during a carnival celebration. | |||
Montresor | Upon arriving at the catacombs, Montresor led Fortunato deeper into the underground chambers, passing through walls of human remains and damp, nitre-covered walls. Despite Fortunato's persistent cough, Montresor encouraged him to continue, offering him more wine along the way. Eventually, they reached a small, hidden recess in the catacombs. | ||
{{ | Montresor quickly chained Fortunato to the granite wall and began to seal him inside the niche with bricks and mortar. As the intoxication wore off, Fortunato realized the gravity of his situation and pleaded for his release. Montresor, however, continued to build the wall, taunting Fortunato with his own cries for help.{{Quote | ||
| | | Text = For the love of God, Montressor! | ||
| | | Context = Fortunato pleads with Montresor as he realizes he's been trapped in the niche. This quote occurs near the end of the story, when Fortunato's fate is sealed. | ||
}} | }} | ||
Once the wall was nearly complete, Fortunato laughed nervously, suggesting that it was all a joke and that they would laugh about it later. Montresor agreed, but continued to seal the niche. Fortunato's final plea was for the love of God, to which Montresor echoed the sentiment but received no response. Montresor called out to Fortunato one last time, but only the jingling of his carnival bells answered. | |||
Montresor finished sealing the niche and left Fortunato to die in the catacombs. For fifty years, no one disturbed the hidden tomb, and Montresor's revenge remained a secret. In pace requiescat! | |||
{{End of text}} | {{End of text}} |
Latest revision as of 12:06, 30 May 2023
The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as I best could; but when he ventured upon insult, I vowed revenge.
Upon arriving at the catacombs, Montresor led Fortunato deeper into the underground chambers, passing through walls of human remains and damp, nitre-covered walls. Despite Fortunato's persistent cough, Montresor encouraged him to continue, offering him more wine along the way. Eventually, they reached a small, hidden recess in the catacombs.
Montresor quickly chained Fortunato to the granite wall and began to seal him inside the niche with bricks and mortar. As the intoxication wore off, Fortunato realized the gravity of his situation and pleaded for his release. Montresor, however, continued to build the wall, taunting Fortunato with his own cries for help.For the love of God, Montressor!
Once the wall was nearly complete, Fortunato laughed nervously, suggesting that it was all a joke and that they would laugh about it later. Montresor agreed, but continued to seal the niche. Fortunato's final plea was for the love of God, to which Montresor echoed the sentiment but received no response. Montresor called out to Fortunato one last time, but only the jingling of his carnival bells answered.
Montresor finished sealing the niche and left Fortunato to die in the catacombs. For fifty years, no one disturbed the hidden tomb, and Montresor's revenge remained a secret. In pace requiescat!