Murders In The Rue Morgue Essay

Words: 1153
Pages: 5

It's scary, it's thrilling, and it's a little bit depressing: it's a classic Edgar Allen Poe story. Edgar Allen Poe is an American poet notoriously known for his emotionally haunting tales of woe and misery. May it be a beautiful women’s tragic death or a psychopathic killer hearing voices in the floors, Poe founded an era of fictional writing in many shapes and forms. However, why does this happen in Poe's storytelling? The reasoning behind this is because Poe would put his own tragic life and turn to writing to make his reality into horrific fantasy. Poe's detective short story, The Murders in the Rue Morgue, is nothing short of this method of thinking as Poe created the psychological structure of his literature. The characters in Poe’s story are a metaphoric and psychological approach to Poe’s early life. The literature tells the plot of two women’s murders and the gruesome aspect of said murders. In a majority of his stories, maybe even all, Poe uses the trope of death, especially death of women. Poe’s biological mother, Eliza Poe, died at twenty-four due to a terrible illness. Fanny Allan, who was also an orphan, took in Edgar for Eliza because Fanny took care of her before her death. When attending the Clarke academy at age fourteen, Poe developed an unhealthy, obsessive infatuation with a classmate’s mother named Jane Stannard. When Fanny became ill and could not provide …show more content…
From first reading the story, it is challenging to see the psychology behind the characters and the plotline, but when reading all about his life, all the struggles he confronted and all the interests that Poe developed growing up, one can see how academically committed Poe was when he wrote his literature. It may be a bit disheartening to read, but nevertheless, Poe was an intellectual who gave birth to an entirely new era of fictional mystery and detective