Wells Create a Sense of Fear and Horror in the Reader of âThe Tell-tale Heartâ and âThe Red Roomâ

- Pages: 4
- Word count: 828
- Category: Fear
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Order NowIn this essay I am going to explore how E.A. Poe and H.G. Wells create a sense of fear and horror in the reader of their books âThe Tell-tale Heartâ and âThe Red Roomâ by pointing out things like the historical context, analysing the words which are used, discussing the setting, plot, characters and the ending. Both of these stories are Victorian ghost stories.
To begin with, ghost stories had a different importance in society at the time when the stories where written. It would have been very scary because they would have been reading by candle light and did not have the luxury of just flicking on a light switch, but nowadays we have scary films like âScreamâ and can just turn on lights if we get scared. Also the majority of people these days do not believe in ghosts or the super-natural because of science.
I thought that neither of these stories was more effective at creating a sense of fear and horror.
The title of the story may also come as a shock to some people. âThe Tell-tale Heartâ sounds like a romantic story where someone canât, doesnât want to or isnât showing there love for someone else. Whereas âThe Red Roomâ sounds like a blood filled room which makes the reader automatically have an idea as to what they are or are about to read.
âThe Tell-tale Heartâ was definitely more effective at creating a sense of fear and horror on this occasion.
Both of the stories settings are created by using descriptions and are quite a few different types of techniques. Right from the beginning in âThe Red Roomâ the author creates a particular mood, atmosphere and tension. Some of the things that the young man said about the place and people there were visual images like ââŠthe man with the withered armâŠâ, ââŠa second man entered, more bent, more wrinkled, more aged âŠâ and ââŠhis lower lip, half averted, hung pale and pink from his decaying yellow teeth.â
These examples increase the tension of the story because they put a horrible picture in the readerâs mind.
In âThe Tell-tale Heartâ, H.G. Wells starts off the story quickly with short sentences with lots of commas and hyphens. He also uses visual images but not as many. He uses senses like touch but mainly sound, like where it saysâs ââŠcough and splutterâŠâ The character in the book also asks the reader lots of questions like âYou fancy me madâŠâ and ââŠam I mad?â. It seems as if the character is trying to prove to the reader and to himself that he is not mad.
I thought that both the stories had an equal effect of creating a sense of fear and horror in the reader.
The plot in the âThe Red Roomâ at the beginning is not very tense and has a gradual build-up of tension. This effect gives the reader time to absorb the atmosphere. If you could show the tension on a graph, it would be a positive correlation between the tension of the story and the time/length.
Whereas âThe Tell-tale Heartâ has a very tense beginning, then the tension dies down a bit, but around half way through the story it starts to gradually rise. There is a gradual build-up to climax throughout the story.
I think that âThe Red Roomâ is better at creating a sense of fear and horror in the reader in this paragraph.
In âThe Red Roomâ, the main character is very sure of himself and does not think that he is afraid of ghosts. He thinks he is better than the people that live there and he thinks that they are just silly old people who believe in ghosts as he does not.
The quote ââŠit will take a very tangible ghost to frighten me.â And âEight-and-twenty years⊠âŠI have lived, and never a ghost have I seen yetâ proves that he does not think he is scared of ghosts.
Right from the beginning of âThe Tell-tale Heartâ it is obvious that the narrator is nervous, mad and is the total opposite of calm. After the first two paragraphs he eases up a little but as the story goes on he gets more and more tense until the very end when he gets found out and kills the man. During the story he has a problem with another manâs eye, the reader never finds out why but it is probably just the simple fact that he is mad.
âThe Tell-tale Heartâ definitely does a better job of creating a sense of fear and horror in the reader than âThe Red` Roomâ.
At the end of âThe Red Roomâ it is all very calm and quiet which is completely different to the end of âThe Tell-tale Heart which ends full of tension with the use of short sentences. Both of the stories would have been very scary when they first came out but I didnât find them very scary at all, but the story did definitely create a sense of fear and horror.