One of the incredible aspects of Poe 's compositions is that he can put the reader into his characters, so they feel as his characters …show more content…
“Everything about this story, from the opening portrayal of the dark tarn and the dark rooms of the house to the unearthly storm which accompanies Madeline 's return from the tomb, helps in conveying the terror that is the mood” (Womack). Indeed, the initial five paragraphs of "The Fall of the House of Usher" are dedicated to making a gothic atmosphere. An ancient, rotting château paints a frightful, rotten picture. The surrounding moat appears to be stagnant and gloomy. The period likewise ties into this mood. It 's harvest time and the climate is cool and dismal. Not many horrors take place during the day, and this story is no different. It 's dark, or at least shadowy. Immediately Poe captures the reader. There is a sense of being confined within the walls of the Usher house. Outside a storm is seething and inside there are strange rooms where windows abruptly whisk open, extinguishing candles. Squeaking and groaning sounds fill the air. The wind is whipping, and the scene is barren. In this gothic writing these are its trappings. The darkness of everything symbolizes death to come. After entering the gothic entrance of the desecrating house, the narrator is led "through many dark and intricate passages" filled with "somber tapestries" and "ebon blackness". Over everything, Poe envelops his atmosphere of distress and irredeemable unhappiness. He evokes his primary effect, the foresight that some …show more content…
He uses the Doppelgänger theme, which is utilized when he depicts the impression of the house in the pool and a striking likeness amongst Roderick and Madeline Usher. A doppelgänger is the ghostly double of a living person or any double of a person. “It 's also referred to as an evil twin” (Wikipedia) . “The death and resurrection of a woman”, Madeline, is also a main theme in "The Fall of the House of Usher" (Wikipedia). The theme of mentally dysfunctional is likewise explored in this work Other than his own disease and being discouraged by Madeline 's weakening condition, Roderick gets " enchained by certain superstitious impressions in regard to the house
" (Womack). He rapidly enters a flimsy, mental state. This state is characterized by his anxiety, depression, and other symptoms. Besides Roger and Madeline, the narrator himself may suffer from mental instability, given his reaction to the depressing scene he describes in the opening paragraphs. Evil has been at work in the Usher house for generations. Roderick Usher 's illness is "a constitutional and family