A Murders Journey Through works of Dostoyevsky and Poe

 
	Some people believe that most murderers have a mental illness which causes them to commit their crime.  This belief is strongly disagreed with  by the authors Edgar Allan Poe and Fyodor Dostoevsky.  Crime and Punishment, "The Tell-Tale Heart", "The Black Cat",and "The Cask of Amontillado" are very similar in this contradiction.  Each murderer takes a specific journey that has been illustrated in each case.  The psychological make-up of each murderer shows that he is a normal person up to the point at which something compels him to commit this horrible crime, and after that his conscience usually leads to his own downfall.
	Before the murder has been committed the character is a regular human being.  In most cases the characters that end up carrying through with this crime are above average people.  Raskolnikov from Crime and Punishment is "... quite an extraordinarily handsome young man..." (Crime and Punishment, pg.21)  Raskolnikov is a very gifted university student, with a very good talent for figuring people out. Raskolinikov takes great pride and care for his family.  On receiving a letter from his mother 

	...he quickly raised the letter to his lips and kissed it; then he spent a long time poring  over the handwriting on the envelope, over the small, slanting handwriting, so familiar and dear to him, of his mother who had once taught him to read and write. (Crime and Punishment, pg.47)

Raskolnikov's mother, who taught him how to read and write did this job quite well.  This resulted in a very gifted and brilliant university student.  This point is illustrated throughout the novel from the planning and carrying out of the murder, to interactions with the police.
	 The narrator from the short story "The Black Cat" describes his "tenderness of heart was even so conspicuous as to make me the jest of his companions." ("The Black Cat", pg.390) He is quite a regular human being who is "...especially fond of animals..." ("The Black Cat", pg.390)  The narrator also has a great wife whom he describes as being quite similar to himself, which shows that he must be quite normal if a good woman chooses to marry him.  Much alike is the narrator from the short story "The Tell-Tale Heart".  Again this character is full of love.  The victim of his crime had done no wrong and for that the narrator "...loved the old man." ("The Tell-Tale Heart", pg.384)  The narrator shows the same brilliance in planning the crime that Raskolnikov exhibits.  People with great intelligence, great lives, possessions and friends must be normal people.  This seems to hold true in the short story "The Cask of Amontillado".  The narrator is a man with great wealth.  He has many friends which would signify that he is quite a normal character.  He lives in a nice house with servants and fine wine.  This all seems to show that his mind is intact, if he obtains and keeps these symbols of success.  It seems as if each and every character discussed is quite a normal human being.  In most cases the wealth, knowledge, or love of others is far above average than most other human beings.
	The normal psychological make-up of a murderer has to 
change before the crime is committed.  Something must happen 
in the character's life that causes them to alter their 
reasoning ability into something that maybe considered as 
insanity.  It is seen quite clear that the loving character 
from "The Black Cat" "experienced a radical alteration for 
the worse." ("The Black Cat", pg.391) The turning point in 
his mind was explained by the narrator.  "But my disease 
grew upon me - for what disease is like Alcohol!"       
("The Black Cat, pg.392) This problem with alcohol is 
clearly the point at which the reasoning of the character 
changes.
	In Raskolnikov's case this change is also quite 
clear.  For an above average university student it would be 
devastating to see education slip through his fingers 
beyond control.  "He was crushed by poverty, but even 
straitened circumstances had ceased to worry him lately." 
(Crime and Punishment, pg.19)  The poverty causes 
Raskolnikov to leave university. Upon leaving university he 
is left alone with his thoughts. "At that moment he was 
fully aware that his thoughts were at times confused and 
that he was very weak: for two days now he had had hardly 
anything to eat." (Crime and Punishment, pg.20)  Poverty is 
clearly what changes Raskolnikov's psyche.  
	The narrator of "The Tell-Tale Heart" has a bizarre 
reason for this change to occur. 	
	
	He had never wronged me. He had never given me 
	insult.  For his gold I had no desire.  I think it was his eye!  yes, it was this!  He had the eye of a vulture - a pale blue eye with a film over it. ("The Tell-Tale Heart", pg.384) 

This figurative meaning of the old man's eye can be 
interpreted in the broad view that the narrator dislikes the 
old man's personality. The narrators change stems from the 
selfishness and uncaring of the old man.  The narrator of 
"The Cask of Amontillado" takes a change that occurs for the 
plain reason of revenge.  it is evident that the character 
has passed a certain point at which his thoughts have 
changed as to compel him to carry through with this crime. 

	In each work the murder has been committed it certainly 
takes a great psychological effect on each character.  The 
narrator of "The Tell-Tale Heart" experiences this as he is 
conversing with the police.
	
	"The ringing became more distinct: - it continued and became more distinct: I talked more freely to get rid of the feeling: but it continued and gained definitiveness - until, at length , I found that the noise was not within my ears." ("The Tell-Tale Heart", pg.389)

It is shown that the narrator's conscience is ringing 
and it is driving him insane.  He gets more insane as time 
passes "It grew louder - louder - louder!" ("The Tell-Tale 
Heart, pg.389) This seems to be how his mind alters and is 
being punished for this alteration for the worse.  
The sound imagery is also used within the story "The Black 
Cat".  After the first murder of his cat, the narrator's 
feeling of guilt grows with every passing day.  "...I longed 
to destroy it with one blow, I was yet withheld from doing 
so, partly by a memory of my former crime." ("The Black 
Cat", pg.396) It seems as if his conscience of his former 
crime is restricting him from choices he once might have 
made.  The narrator's feeling of guilt is eased by the 
discovery of a new cat.  This turns out to be too much for 
him to take.  As the narrator is trying 
to kill the second cat, his wife gets in the way and he 
kills her instead of the cat. After this happens his guilt 
is very unnoticeable.  A cry is heard as the police are 
searching hi house and eventually reach the tomb in which 
his wife is hidden.  It was "Quickly swelling into one long 
, loud, and continuous scream... a wailing shriek, half 
horror and half triumph..." ("The Black Cat", pg.400) Again 
this scream signifies the triumph of the conscience or of 
good over the evil deed that the character has attempted to 
conceal.  
	The novel Crime and Punishment deals with this same 
idea of the role that guilt plays in the downfall of a 
murder.  Raskolnikov begins his dealings with his conscience 
very soon after the crime.  Raskolnikov leaves clues around 
"...because all his mental faculties were weakened and 
shaken - his mind was clouded." (Crime and Punishment, 
pg.109) This cloud of judgment causes Raskolnikov to attempt 
to avoid his conscience.  He explains "What is it?  Am I 
still delirious or is it all real?  I think it's real?... oh 
I remember now I must run." (Crime and Punishment, pg.146) 
Raskolnikov continues to sway back and forth between 
admitting his guilt, and trying to escape it.  It is shown 
through several events that Raskolnikov's crime has led him 
to the solitude of delirium and it gradually eats him away 
inside.  The realization is finally made that he is not the 
extraordinary man that he thought he was.  He states,
	
	
	

	I am a louse', he added, grinding his teeth, "because I myself am perhaps worse and nastier than the louse I killed, and I knew beforehand that I would say that after killing her!" (Crime and Punishment, pg.292)
	
As the Raskolnikov's deterioration continues, he finally 
comes to the realization that his conscience cannot deal 
with this any longer.  "It was I who killed the old woman 
money-lender and her sister Lisaveta with a hatchet and 
robbed them." (Crime and Punishment, pg.542) The confession 
given at to end his ordeal is a direct relation 
to his conscience.  

	This is much like "The Tell-Tale Heart" in which the 
narrator also confesses, ""Villians!" I shrieked, "dissemble 
no more!  I admit the deed - tear up the planks! - here, 
here! - it is the beating of his hideous heart!" ("The 
Tell-Tale Heart", pg.389) It is not stated that the narrator 
admits his guilt but is certainly is symbolized by the 
scream.  This also leads to the downfall of this character, 
much like the others. It is truly obvious that each 
characters conscience leads them to insanity which in turn 
leads to their own downfall.
	
	A murderer's journey includes several distinct stages.  
These stages:  being a normal human being, taking a turning 
point to cause the murder, and dealing with his conscience 
are all followed in each and every case of study.  The 
character that has committed the murder travels through this 
process.  This journey is a process that is happening in 
everyday society, and is clearly illustrated through each 
piece of literature.
Bibliography


Dostoevsky, Fyodor Milchailovich. Crime and Punishment. Markham: Penguin Classics, 1983.

Poe, Edgar Allan. "The Black Cat". Great Short Works of Edgar-Allan Poe. G. R. Thompson. New York. Perennial Library, 1970. 390-401.

Poe, Edgar Allan. "The Cask of Amontillado". Great Short Works of Edgar-Allan Poe. G. R. Thompson. New York. Perennial Library, 1970. 496-503.

Poe, Edgar Allan. "The Tell-Tale Heart". Great Short Works of Edgar-Allan Poe. G. R. Thompson. New York. Perennial Library, 1970. 384-390.
 






































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