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Edgar Allen Poe's The Tell-Tale-Heart

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The language and sentence structure is significant in Edgar Allen Poe's The Tell-Tale-Heart to portray the narrator's mentally unstable condition and personality. Poe depicts the narrator's personality as an individual who suffers from a mentally unstable condition through a series of anaphoras, “You should have seen how wisely I proceeded – with what caution – with what foresight – with what dissimulation I went to work.” (13). The repetition of the words “with what” incorporates a sense of confidence to the narrator's personality by describing how he will proceed with “caution” and “foresight” when determining how the narrator will resolve his inner conflict with the old man's blind eye. Poe incorporates the movement in the story physically

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