Certainly the narrator’s knocking on the wall should be
construed as a mark of his arrogance. That the cat answers from within the walled-off
area might be interpreted by such phrases as “pride goes before a fall” and “murder will
out.” The answer is thus that knocking on the wall is both a mark of arrogance and an
admission of guilt. It is certainly an interpretive remark if a student suggests that he
didn't really hear anything, and the ending is similar to The Tell-Tale
Heart. If a reader thinks that there really was no sound of the cat, it might
be a stretch to produce any tangible evidence for that, for that would go against the
crux of the story in the style that Poe wrote it.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
What does the knocking on the wall signify?
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