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Edgar Allan Poe's Cat Point Of View

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Edgar Allan Poe's Cat Point Of View
Poe presents the narrator all throughout the story as a suspicious individual due to him constantly expressing his opinion over his own sanity and views towards himself. From the beginning of the story, the narrator would immediately give off a sense of uneasiness when he would have a sudden discussion over his sharpened hearing skills. As he stated, “I heard all things in the heaven and in the earth. I heard many things in hell. How, then, am I mad? Hearken!” (Poe 37) He is trying to influence the reader into believing in him and his story, creating trust between the two. This madman also believes that he knows the full story due to his own description on how he records the world, yet he doesn’t even question his own reasons or approach on

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