Edgar Allan Poe's Repeated Use Of Imagery

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Edgar Allan Poe's repeated use of imagery conveys the his message of one being manipulated by one's own guilt and fear. One of the first examples of imagery is the narrator's description of the old man's blue eye. He claims the old man's "eye was like the eye of a vulture," and describes the continual "cold feeling" he experiences every time he sees the blue eye. The narrator's utilization of the dynamic imagery is to support his his actions as sane as he claims the old man's vulture preys upon the weak and dying, so he must rid it from this world. His obsessive nature is conveyed through his descriptions of the eye throughout the story, saying it always gives him a "cold feeling" and therefore he must get rid of the eye. The cold feeling he

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