In “The Black Cat”, an unnamed narrator has a strong affection for pets until he perversely turns to abusing them. His favorite, a pet black cat, bites him one night and the narrator punishes it by cutting its eye out and then hanging it from a tree. The home burns down but one remaining wall shows a burned outline of a cat hanging from a noose. He soon finds another black cat, similar to the first except for a white mark on its chest, but he develops a hatred for it as well. He attempts to kill the cat with an axe but his wife stops him; instead, the narrator murders his wife. He conceals the body behind a brick wall in his basement. The police soon come and, after the narrator’s tapping on the wall is met with a shrieking sound, they find not only the wife’s corpse but also the black cat that had been accidentally walled in with the body and alerted them with its cry. The story is a study of the psychology of guilt, often paired in analysis with Poe’s “The Tell-Tale Heart”.
| Alias Pluto |
| Real Names/Alt Names Pluto |
| Characteristics Literary Characters, Feline, Realism and Victorian Age |
| Creators/Key Contributors Harry Clarke, Edgar Allen Poe |
| First Appearance “The Black Cat” in The Saturday Evening Post (August 19, 1843) |
| First Publisher United States Saturday Post |
| Appearance List Collections: Tales of Mystery and Imagination (1923). Comics: Yellowjacket Comics #1 (1944). Film: Tales of Terror (1962). |
| Sample Read Tales of Mystery and Imagination [Internet Archive] |
| Description In “The Black Cat”, an unnamed narrator has a strong affection for pets until he perversely turns to abusing them. His favorite, a pet black cat, bites him one night and the narrator punishes it by cutting its eye out and then hanging it from a tree. The home burns down but one remaining wall shows a burned outline of a cat hanging from a noose. He soon finds another black cat, similar to the first except for a white mark on its chest, but he develops a hatred for it as well. He attempts to kill the cat with an axe but his wife stops him; instead, the narrator murders his wife. He conceals the body behind a brick wall in his basement. The police soon come and, after the narrator’s tapping on the wall is met with a shrieking sound, they find not only the wife’s corpse but also the black cat that had been accidentally walled in with the body and alerted them with its cry. The story is a study of the psychology of guilt, often paired in analysis with Poe’s “The Tell-Tale Heart”. |
| Source The Black Cat (short story) – Wikipedia |
