The Fall of the House of Usher by Edgar Allan Poe
The Fall of the House of Usher Context
This is story of supernatural horror
by Edgar Allan Poe published in 1839 in Burton's
Gentleman's Magazine and issued in Tales (1845) one of Poe's most
terrifying tales, 'The Fall of the House of Usher' is narrated by a man who has
been invited to visit his childhood friend Roderick Usher. Usher gradually
makes clear that his twin sister Madeline has been placed in the family vault
not quite dead. When she reappears in her blood stained shroud, the visitor
rushes to leave as the entire house splits and sinks into a lake.
The Fall of the House of Usher Characters
Narrator
a friend of the master of the House of Usher.
When he visits his friend, he witnesses terrifying events.
Roderick Usher
the master of the house. He suffers from a
depressing malaise characterized by strange behavior.
Madeline Usher
twin sister of Roderick. She also
suffers from a strange illness. After apparently dying, she rises from her
coffin.
Servant
domestic in the Usher household. He
attends to the narrator's horse.
Valet
domestic in the Usher household who
conducts the narrator to Roderick Usher's room.
Physician
one of several doctors who treat
Madeline Usher.
The Fall of the House of Usher Setting
The setting is
referred to by the narrator as "House
of Usher" to refer to both the physical structure of the house and the
last of the Usher race; Roderick and Madeline are the last of the Usher family.
Poe begins by description and continues with description to the extent that the
whole story becomes a descriptive account of the mental breakdown of Roderick.
Poe focuses on settings that had many descriptions and details such as the
dark, gloomy, and dull places in the story. What he desires is to present a psychological
analysis of the life of that strange family. Everything in the house is
breaking down, even the mentality of its owners.
The Fall of the House of Usher Summary
A childhood companion of Roderick
Usher, who has not seen him years, is summoned to the gloomy house of Usher to
comfort his sick friend. The decayed mansion stands on the edge of a tarn, and
is fungus-grown and dreary. Roderick and his twin Madeline are the only
surviving members of the family, and both suffer serious physical and nervous
maladies. Roderick entertains his friend with curious musical and poetic improvisations,
indicating his morbid tastes by his choice of reading Madeline in a cataleptic
trance, is thought to be dead, and her body is placed in the family vault.
During a storm, Roderick is overcome by a severe nervous agitation, and his
friend reads aloud from a medieval romance, whose horrifying episodes coincide with
strange sounds from outside the room. Finally Madeline appears, enshrouded, and
she and her brother fall dead together. The friend rushes from the house, and
as he looks back in the moonlight, sees the whole House of Usher split asunder
and sink into the tarn.
The Fall of the House of Usher Plot
The tale opens with the unnamed
narrator arriving at the house of his boyhood friend, Roderick Usher, having received a letter from him in a distant part
of the country complaining of an illness and asking for his help. Although Poe
wrote this short story before the invention of modern psychological science,
Roderick's symptoms can be described according to its terminology. They include
a form of sensory overload known as hyperesthesia (hypersensitivity to light,
sounds, smells and tastes), hypochondria (an excessive preoccupation or worry
about having a serious illness) and acute anxiety. It is revealed that
Roderick's twin sister: Madeline, is also ill and falls into cataleptic,
death-live trances. The narrator is impressed with Roderick's paintings, and attempts
to cheer him by reading with him and listening to his improvised musical
compositions on the guitar. Roderick sings "the Haunted palace", then
tells the narrator that he believes the house he lives in to be sentient, and
that this sentience arises from the arrangement of the masonry and vegetation
surrounding it.
Roderick later informs the narrator
that his sister has died and insists that she be entombed for two weeks in a vault
(family tomb) in the house before being permanently buried. the narrator helps
Roderick put the body in the tomb, and he notes that Madeline has rosy cheeks,
as some do after death They inter her, but over the next week both Roderick and
the narrator find themselves becoming increasingly agitated for no apparent
reason. A storm begins. Roderick comes to the narrator's bedroom, which is
situated directly above the vault, and throws open his window to the storm. He
notices that the tarn surrounding the house seems to glow in the dark as it
glowed in Roderick Usher's paintings, although there is no lightning
The narrator attempts to calm
Roderick by reading aloud The Mad Trist, a novel involving a knight named Ethelred
who breaks into a hermit's dwelling in an attempt to escape an approaching
storm, only to find palace of gold guarded by a dragon. He also finds hanging
on the wall a shield of shining brass on which is written a legend: that the
one who slays the dragon wins the shield. With a strike of his mace, Ethelred
kills the dragon, who dies with a piercing shriek, and proceeds to take the shield,
which falls to the floor with an unnerving clatter.
As the narrator reads of the night's
forcible entry into the dwelling, cracking and ripping sounds are heard
somewhere in the house when the Dragon is described as shrieking as it dies, a
shriek is heard, again within the house. As he relates the shield falling from
off the wall, a reverberation, metallic and hollow, can be heard. Roderick
becomes increasingly hysterical, and eventually exclaims that these sounds are
being made by his sister, who was in fact alive when she was entombed and that
the narrator knew that she was alive. The bedroom door is then blown open to
reveal Madeline standing there. She falls on her brother, and both land on the
floor as corpses. The narrator then flees the house, and, as he does so,
notices a flash of light causing him to look back upon the House of Usher, in
time to watch it break in two, the fragments sinking into the tarn.
The Fall of the House of Usher Analysis
The Fall of the House of Usher is considered the best example of Poe's
"totality", where every element and detail is related and relevant.
The theme of the crumbling, haunted castle is a key feature of Horace Walpole's Castle
of Otranto, a late 18th century novel which largely contributed in defining the
gothic genre.
The Fall of the House of Usher shows Poe's ability to create an emotional tone in his work,
specifically, feelings of fear, doom, and guilt. These emotions center on
Roderick Usher who, like many Poe Characters, suffers from an unnamed disease.
Like the narrator in The tell-tale Heart,
his disease causes his hyperactive senses. The illness manifests physically but
is based on Roderick's mental or even moral state. He is sick, it is suggested,
because he expects to be sick based on his family's history of illness and is,
therefore, essentially a hypochondriac. Similarly, he buries his sister alive
because he expects to bury her alive, creating his own self-fulfilling
prophecy.
The House of Usher, itself doubly referring both to the actual structure and the family,
plays a significant role in the story. It is the first "character" that
the narrator introduces to the reader, presented with a humanized description:
its windows are described as "eyelive" twice in the first paragraph.
The fissure that develops in its side is symbolic of the decay of the Usher
family and the house 'dies' along with the two Usher siblings. This connection
was emphasized in Roderick's poem "The
Haunted Palace" which seems to be a direct reference to the house that
foreshadows doom.
L. Sprague de Camp, in his Lovecraft: A Biography, wrote that
"according to the late Poe expert Thomas O, Mabbott, H.P. Lovecraft, in
"supernatural Horror", solved a problem in the interpretation of Poe
by arguing that "Roderick Usher,
his sister Madeline, and the house
all shared one common soul". The explicit psychological dimension of this
tale has prompted many critics to analyse it as a description of the human
psyche, comparing instance, the House to the unconscious, and its central crack
to the personality split which is called dissociative identity disorder. Mental
disorder is also evoked through the themes of melancholy, possible incest, and
vampirism. An incestuous relationship between Roderick and Madeline is never
explicitly stated, but seems implied by the strange attachment between the two.
Opium, which
Poe mentions several times in both his prose and poems, is mentioned twice in
the tale. The gloomy sensation occasioned by the dreary landscape around the
Usher mansion is compared by the narrator to the sickness caused by the
withdrawal symptoms of an opium-addict. The narrator also describes Roderick
Usher's appearance as that an "irreclaimable cater of opium". It
might be argued that Roderick Usher's hypersensitivity and hypochondria are
both consistent with the withdrawal symptoms of opiate-addiction. Poe's many
mentions of opium and his exact descriptions of his effects and of opium
additions withdrawal symptoms have led many to believe that Poe had first-hand
experience of opium and that he might have been an opium-addict himself. The
truth is that opium and laudanum (opium tincture) in the 19th were very common
and many 19th century writers such as S.T. Coleridge and Charles Baudelaire
were in fact opium-addicts.
The opening epigraph quotes "La
Refus" (1851) by the French song writer, Pierre-Jean de Biranger
(1780-1857), translated into English as "the heart is a suspended lute, as
soon as it is touched, it resounds”, Biranger's original text reads "Mon
Coeur" (my heart) and met not “son coeur" (His/her heart)
The narrator describes one of Usher's
musical compositions as “a... singular perversion and amplification of the wild
air of the last waltz of Von Weber." Poe refers to a popular piano work of his
time - Weber's last waltz was actually composed by Carl Gottilieb Reissiger
(1789-1859).
Usher's painting reminds the narrator of the Swiss-born British painter Henry Fuseli (1741-1825).
The German writer E.T.A. Hoffmann, the role model and
inspiration for Poe, published the story "Das Majorat" in 1819,
having similarity with Poe's story.
There are atmospheric similarity- eerie sounds in the night, the story within a
story and the house-owner being called "Roderick".
Poe's story is
highly unsettling macabre work is recognized as a masterpiece of American Gothic literature. Indeed, as
in many of his tales, Poe borrows much from the Gothic tradition still, as G.
R. Thomson writes in his Introduction to Great Short Works of Edgar Allan Poe, "the tale has long been hailed as a
masterpiece of Gothic horror; it is also a masterpiece of dramatic irony and
structural symbolism."
Poe's inspiration for the story may
be based upon events of the Usher House,
located on Boston's Lewis wharf. As the story goes, a sailor and the young wife
of the older owner were caught and entombed in their trysting spot by her
husband when the Usher house was, down in 1800, two bodies were found embraced
in a cavity in the cellar.
Another source of inspiration may be
from an actual couple by the name of Mr. and Mrs. Like Usher, the friends and
fellow actors of his mother Eliza Poe. The couple took care of Eliza's three
children (including Poe) during her time of illness and eventual death.
Scholars speculate that Poe, who was
an influence on Herman Melville,
inspired the character of Ahab in
Melville's novel, Moby Dick.
John McAleer maintained that the idea for "objectifying Ahab's flawed
character" came from the "evocative force” of Poe's story. In both Ahab
and the house of Usher, the appearance of fundamental soundness is visible,
flawed - by Ahab's livid scar, and by the fissure in the masonry of Usher.
The Fall of the House of Usher: Theory and Practice
Poe believed that a tale should have
unity of effect and that everything else should be subordinated to this unity: The Fall of the House of Usher best
represents his theory and craftsmanship as it is tightly structured,
concentrated and possessing unity of effect, design and atmosphere. The very
opening of the story establishes an atmosphere of desolation and
disintegration. The oppressive autumn day and the decaying, ancient family
mansion are both symbolic of the terrible
loom that awaits the hero Roderick Usher,
the neuropath of impotent will.
The tempestuous elements of nature,
the solemn movement of prose, rising to a crescendo at the end and all the
strands of the story converging to the "single effect" produce the
grim phantasm, fear, which dominates the story. The strange appearance of the
house, the weird actions of the mad inhabitants of the house of Usher, the
strange burial and return to life of Madeline, the death of Usher and the
destruction of the house, are incidents that contribute to producing the collect
of horror.
But there are other and more factors
that build up an atmosphere of horror. One such factor is a series of
increasingly weird identification, for instance between the house and its
inmates, between Usher and his sister Madeline, between the works of art and
actual happenings and finally between the madness of Usher and the momentary
madness of the narrator.
The Fall of the House of Usher Theme
In The Fall of the House of
Usher, Poe tries to explore the nature of humanity. The story focuses on
several interrelated themes, namely death, isolation and madness. This is why
he is all the time looking and thinking, speaking about death, isolation,
madness and violence.
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