Title: Objective: students will read
1- Objective students will read The Masque of the
Red Death in order to compare to other romantics
and examine for allegory. - Warm-up Define allegory (462) and copy the chart
to fill out after you read.
2Allegory
Person, Object or Event Possible Meaning Possible Lesson of Story
The prince
The abbey
The series of seven rooms
The clock
The stranger
3The Masque of the Red Death
4Edgar Allan Poe1809-1849
5His Family and Tragic Life
- Born in Boston
- The son of traveling actors
- Lived a tragic and unhappy life
6Tragic and Unhappy Life
- Mother died of tuberculosis when Poe was one
- Father deserted him at the age of two
- Adopted by Mr. and Mrs. John Allan
- Had constant disagreements with his step-father
John Allan
7. . . continued
- Studied briefly at the University of Virginia
- Drinking and gambling difficulties kept him from
continuing at UVA
University of Virginia, 1856
8. . .continued
- Received an appointment to West Point, but
provoked his own dismissal - Caused a final separation between himself and
step-father
West Point Crest
9. . .continued
- In 1836 married his 14 year old cousin, Virginia
- Last 12 years of life worked as journalist,
editor, and creative writer
Virginia Clemm
10. . . continued
- Lived in poverty stricken conditions most of his
life - In 1846 wife died after a long illness
Poes home during the 1840s
11Addiction
- All evidence suggests that Poe was an alcoholic.
- Poe also habitually used drugs such as morphine,
opium, and laudanum to treat depression and other
health conditions. - Poe had a weakened nervous system due to a brain
lesion and a heart condition. - Laudanum, a highly addictive, opium based
medicine, was commonly used to treat headaches
and stomach pains in 1800s.
12. . . continued
- Died in Baltimore after having been found in a
drunken stupor - Died a poor man
13Poes Work
- Known for
- Tales of mystery and terror stories
- Introducing the modern detective story
14Just a Few Titles
- Short Stories
- The Tell-Tale Heart
- The Cask of Amontillado
- The Black Cat,
- The Pit and The Pendulum
- Poems
- The Raven
- Annabel Lee
- To Helen
- Lenore
15The Masque of the Red
Death
16The Setting An abbey
17The Setting
is an abbey, or
monastery, converted by the rich Prince Prospero
into a private palace and banquet hall.
The time is the Middle Ages
18The Setting An abbey
19The Setting An abbey
20The Plague
is usually associated
with the worst contagion to hit Europe before the
20th century the Black Death which, in
the mid-14th century, killed roughly one-third of
the continents population.
21Its spread 1347-1351
The Plague
22The Plague
came from a bacterium
now named Yersinia pestis
that normally lived in the bloodstreams of fleas,
which, in turn, lived on black rats.
23The Plague
When the rats died, the fleas had to find new
homes humans and a new food supply human
blood. When fleas bit people, they passed along
the bacteria the same pestis that had killed
the rats.
24The Plague
in human hosts (such
as this modern victim)
infected the
lymph nodes, causing black swellings, called
buboes.
From this symptom came the diseases common
names Black Death and Bubonic Plague.
25The Plague
Once infected, without modern antibiotics,
medieval victims stood a 90 chance of dying
within a week.
26The Plague
Poes version of this illness the Red
Death does not strictly correspond to bubonic
plague. He combines it with tuberculosis, which
killed several family members, and plays up
the bloodiness of the disease. For
dramatic effect, he also shortens the infections
time span, from years (tuberculosis) or days
(bubonic plague) to minutes (Red Death).
27The Plague
Poes version
The scarlet stains upon the body and
especially upon the face of the victim, were the
pest ban which shut him out from the aid and from
the sympathy of his fellow-men. And the whole
seizure, progress and termination of the disease,
were the incidents of half an hour. From The
Masque of the Red Death
28The Plague
in the Middle Ages
had no effective cure. Doctors tried to treat it
by lancing the buboes.
29The Plague
, either way, killed
millions,
30The Plague
Prince Prospero, was not hanging around for the
Red Death to take him. He had other plans.
31The Plan
Before the Red Death arrived, Prospero
planned to be elsewhere specifically, in his
converted abbey, with all that extra room.
32The Plan
a thousand hale and light-hearted friends from
among the knights and dames of his court.
33The Plan
including the requisite musicians, jesters,
jugglers, and other entertainers ...
34The Plan
... then the doors could be welded shut, and the
abbey could become a fortress
35The Plan
After five or six months, the Prince decided
that the plan needed to be expanded that what
he really needed, as a diversion, was a fancy
costume ball.
He needed a masque.
36The Masquerade
There were much glare and glitter and piquancy
and phantasm
So the guests prepared their costumes ...
37The Masquerade
There was much of the beautiful, much of the
wanton,
38The Masquerade
... and the ball began. And it was a success
up to a point, anyway
39The Masquerade
40The Masquerade
41Vocabulary
- Define the vocabulary
- Complete Vocabulary in Action (463)
42Literary Term Allusion
- Reference to a famous historical or literary
figure or event - Best sources are literature, history, Greek
mythology, and the Bible - Serves to explain or clarify or enhance whatever
subject
43Literary Term Gothic Elements
- Supernatural horrors and an atmosphere of unknown
terror pervades the action - High emotion, sentimentalism, but also pronounced
anger, surprise, and especially terror - Use of words indicating fear, mystery
apparition, devil, ghost, haunted, terror,
fright, fainting
44Literary Term Symbol
- Something that is itself and yet also represents
something else - Universal symbols embodying universally
recognizable meanings - Invested symbols give symbolic meaning by the way
an author uses them in a literary work - Symbols are very common in literature
45Allegory A Story Behind a Story
- An allegory is a narrative that is really a
double story. One story takes place on the
surface. Under the surface the storys characters
and events represent abstract ideas or states of
being, things like love or freedom, evil or
goodness, hell or heaven. - To work, an allegory must operate on two levels.
On the level of pure storytelling, an allegory
must hold our attention. Its characters must seem
believable and interesting enough for us to care
about them. On the allegorical level the ideas in
the story must be accessible to us. As you read,
you should find that the allegorical level of the
story gradually begins to strike you.
- See if you find that Poes story of arrogance and
death hooks you on both levels.
46The Masque of the Red Death Background
- Poes fictional Red Death is probably based on
the Black Death, which swept fourteenth-century
Europe and Asia, killing as many as two thirds of
the population in some regions in less than
twenty years. Poe calls the plague the Red
Death because victims oozed blood from painful
sores. In this story a fourteenth-century prince
gives a costume party, or masque, to try to
forget about the epidemic raging all around him.
47The Black Death
- This particular type of plague was the bubonic
plague, which is caused by a bacteria that lived
in rats and other rodents. Human beings were
infected through bites from the fleas that lived
on these rats. The symptoms associated with
plague are bubos, which are painful swellings of
the lymph nodes. These typically appear in the
armpits, legs, neck, or groin. If left untreated,
plague victims die within two to four days.
Victims of this disease suffered swelling in the
armpit and groin, as well as bleeding in the
lungs. Victims also suffered a very high fever,
delirium, and prostration.
48Summary
- Poes tale of an eccentric nobleman and the Red
Death ravaging his land can be read both as a
chilling ghost story and as an allegory
representing human folly and the inevitability of
death. (In other words, you cannot hide from
death regardless how much money you have.)
49Comprehension Check
- Why does Prince Prospero close himself and his
courtiers off in the abbey? - Why does the masked figures presence cause such
a sensation? - What happens to the prince and the revellers?
50Time for further thought
51Summary
- Prince Prospero invites a thousand lords and
ladies to escape death by living luxuriously in
his castle until the pestilence passes. - To entertain his guests Prospero hosts a
masquerade party that takes place in seven halls,
each a different color.
52Summary
- At the stroke of midnight, a tall figure in a
blood-splattered burial costume appears. - Prospero demands that his friends seize the
intruder, but everyone is frozen with fear as the
stranger slowly walks through the rooms. - Finally, Prospero rushes after him into the black
seventh room.
53Summary
- When the intruder turns, the host falls dead.
- The revelers then grab the stranger but find the
costume empty. - All soon die of the Red Death.
54Comments
- The allegorical meaning of the story is found in
such details as - Prosperos name (Prospero means prosperous)
- Unfortunately, the Red Death attacks the rich and
poor alike - The strangers appearance (Dressed like the Grim
Reaper or Death) - The arrangement of the seven halls
- The rooms of the palace, lined up in a series,
allegorically represent the stages of life. - Their colors, particularly the black (death) and
red (blood) of the westernmost room with its
ebony clock marking the inevitable passage of
time.
No matter how beautiful the castle, how
luxuriant the clothing, or how rich the food, no
mortal, not even a prince, can escape death.
-Sparknotes.com
55Symbols
- Symbols are people, places, events, or things
that stand for ideas larger than themselves.
56(No Transcript)
57Symbolism
- What symbols do you see in this story?
58The Seven Rooms
- Blue- East, windows the same color
- Purple- windows the same color
- Green- windows the same color
- Orange- windows the same color
- White- windows the same color
- Violet- windows the same color
- Black- West, blood-red windows
59Other Symbols Meanings
- The Ebony Clock
- The Masquerade Ball
- wearing masks, anonymous could represent
everyone - Plague(The Red Death)
- The Uninvited Guest
60The Seven Rooms What do they symbolize?
- Where does the sun rise/set?
- East West
- Which color symbolizes death?
- Black
- A day can represent a persons life
- Sunrise is birth
- Sunset(or night) is death
61The Ebony ClockWhat does it mean?
- Time running out?
- Mortality time running out eventually ending in
death
62The Uninvited Guest?
- A representation of death (specifically The Red
Death) that comes to kill Prince Prospero and the
rest of the nobles.
63Theme?
- No one, no matter how rich or powerful, can
escape the slow march of timeand ultimately
death.
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