Thursday, July 2, 2020
The relation between Roderick Usher and the family mansion - Literature Essay Samples
Edgar Allan Poe, who was born in the early nineteenth century, had an undeniable impact on American literature. Influenced by the eraââ¬â¢s trend, the Romanticism, he had written plenty of short stories, tales and poems spiced with gothic features and grotesque humour. His widely known works are The Pit and the Pendulum, The Tell-Tale Heart, The Black Cat, The Raven and The Fall of the House of Usher. In this essay I will discuss the lattermost, exploring the strange connections between the protagonist and his house and the supernatural events that had befallen them. Poe uses personification to describe the Usher mansion, we could say, it is considered the fourth character. Entering the scene, the narrator found himself in a gloomy, dreadful condition, which he failed to explain rationally. The house with its ââ¬Å¾vacant eye-like windowsâ⬠(Works, III. 273), the atmosphere ââ¬Å¾which had reeked up from the decayed treesâ⬠(Works, III. 276) all had their terrible influence on both Usher and the narrator. The friend from boyhood, Roderick Usher summons the narrator to his mansion, claiming he is suffering from a mysterious mental illness; therefore he has not much time left and asking the narrator to spend few days with him. His sickness, a ââ¬Å¾constitutional and a family evilâ⬠(Works, III. 280), the curse and the fate of the Usher race, ââ¬Å¾an effect, which the physique of the gray walls and turrets â⬠¦ brought about upon the morale of his existenceâ⬠(Works, III. 280-281) had poisoned him. It is Usher who sugges ts that ââ¬Å¾the house is alive and has a malignant influence on his mindâ⬠(Thompson, p. 18). According to Barton Levi (quoted in Jonas 55), the idea of ââ¬â¢dwellingââ¬â¢ has two aspects: a temporary state â⬠¦ it can be abandoned and even allowed to go to ruin; on the other hand, it implies the dependence of life on its surrounding â⬠¦ a decisive difference to the dweller and determines his whole conditionâ⬠(3). In our case, it is the second alternative; everything surrounding the house and inside as well are contaminated and contagious. The books, the arts and its people are infectious; hence even the narrator wonders if he has lost his sanity as reading their books, and acts as a listening audience to Roderickââ¬â¢s music and art. The personification of the family mansion reaches its peak when the narrator notices that Usherââ¬â¢s face resembles the house. It is not just the mansion that had decayed, but Roderick also had its destructive impact on him; ââ¬Å¾his large and luminous eyes â⬠¦ the ââ¬â¢web-like, silken hairââ¬â¢ â⬠¦ merges the face-like structure of the house with Usherââ¬â¢s faceâ⬠(Thompson, p. 20). This indicates that the mansion is more than mere personification. The cursed house of the Usher race is not only a personification, but also represents Rodericks sickened mind. The entering scene implies that the house is in fact Roderickââ¬â¢s brain condition; ââ¬Å"there appeared to be a wild inconsistency between its still perfect adaptation of parts and the crumbling condition of individual stonesâ⬠(Works, III. 276), which indicates that Usherââ¬â¢s mind is still one, working engine, but many areas are damaged and demoralized. The ââ¬Å"barely perceptible fissure, which extending from the roof â⬠¦ made its way down the wall in a zigzag directionâ⬠(Works, III. 276) also shows the broken, ill mind of his. When the narrator is ushered by the valet to the ââ¬Å"masterâ⬠, at that point he realizes how many ââ¬Å"dark and intricate passagesâ⬠(Works, III. 276) he has to go through to find Roderick in the studio. This scene implies that in our mind, we have hidden rooms full of thoughts and dark passages with secret s too, those we may have never showed to anyone else, and therefore it is the brain of Usher. Rashkin argues that ââ¬Å"The Haunted Palaceâ⬠poem is ââ¬Å"an allegorical description of the head of Roderick Usher, whose eyes, blonde hair, teeth and lips are deemed to correspond to the palaceââ¬â¢s windows, yellow banners, and pearl and ruby doorâ⬠(124), which, again tells us the face-like appearance of the house that also resembles Roderick. She also notes that the Usher house is ââ¬Å"a reflective of the Usher raceâ⬠(131). It is not only the mysterious illness or curse that is inherited by all the members from their family, but the house too. Moreover, we can assert that the house and Usherââ¬â¢s mind are one. The work of Butler indicates that just as the house has a ruined physique, Roderick has a ââ¬Å"deteriorating physiognomyâ⬠as well, and the discussion ââ¬Å"of the dwellingââ¬â¢s oppressive affords parallels to the melancholic qualities of his own mindâ⬠(192-193). In fact, the Usherââ¬â¢s doomed fate is twisted with the house.Indeed, ââ¬Å"the house, the atmosphere, its inhabitants and the art they produce or consumeâ⬠(Roche, p. 28) are tied together. These ties are so inseparable from each other, that ââ¬Å"Roderick, his house, his twin have become virtually the same organism, a single diseased consciousness and constitutionâ⬠, as Butler points out (193). They are all related to each other, could be seen as one. Furthermore, in the end of the novel, when Madeline shows her unbelievable, supernatural strength and returns from her tomb back bloodstained to take revenge on her brother for burying her alive, all, including the house with the exception of the narrator, who manages to flee, meet their demise. The mansion collapses into the dim tarn, starting from the earlier mentioned zigzag fissure. Having met their gloomy fate, the Ushers leave no relatives alive. In brief, the house is in fact alive, a character with its own atmosphere and face-like features, and in the same time, a reflection of the diseased mind and thoughts of Roderick. The vivified, living, embodied house from Gothic tales, the artistic, but mad soul Usher from the era of Romanticism, all the same contaminated organism and mind. As they had been living together for years, thus they had to perish together also. Works Cited Poe, Edgar Allan. The Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe. Vol. III: Tales ââ¬â part 02, edited by J. A. Harrison, 1902, pp. 273-297. Roche, David. ââ¬Å¾The Unhealthy in The Fall of the House of Usher: Poes Aesthetics of Contamination.â⬠The Edgar Allan Poe Review, published by Penn State University Press, Vol. 10, No. 1 (SPRING 2009), pp. 20-35. Thompson, G. R. ââ¬Å¾The Face in the Pool: Reflections of the Doppelgà ¤nger in ââ¬â¢The Fall of the House of Usherââ¬â¢.â⬠Poe Studies, published by Washington State University Press, Vol. V, no. 1, June 1972, pp. 16-21. St. Armand, Barton Levi. ââ¬Å¾Usher Unveiled: Poe and the Metaphysic of Gnosticism.â⬠Poe Studies, published by Washington State University Press, Vol. V, no. 1, June 1972, pp. 1-8. Butler, David W. ââ¬Å¾Usherââ¬â¢s Hypochondriasis: Mental Alienation and Romantic Idealism in Poeââ¬â¢s Gothic Talesâ⬠, 1976, pp. 185-196. On Poe, The Best from American Literature, edited by Louis J. Budd and Edwin H. Cady. Published by Duke University press, Durham and London, 1993. Rashkin, Esther. Family Secrets and the Psychoanalysis of Narrative. pp. 123-155. Series: Princeton Legacy Library, published by Princeton University Press, 1992. Jonas, Hans. ââ¬Å"Gnostic Imagery and Symbolic Languageâ⬠, The Gnostic Religion. Boston, Beacon Press, 1958, pp. 48-99.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.