Why did fortunato insult montresor




















On the contrary, even fifty years after he committed the deed, Montresor still thinks he was perfectly justified in murdering Fortunato. The thought of Fortunado dying in there, for a moment, makes him sick. So, his sick heart does make him feel bad probably, but in denial, he blames it on something else and rushed away. Montresor is adamant about not being caught or arrested, which is why he refrains from telling anyone about his crime for such a long time.

Montresor murders Fortunato by burying him alive. Fortunato more than likely died of asphyxiation or starvation behind the wall that Montresor erected. No one deserves to die. This preview shows page 1 — 3 out of 3 pages. Montresor stops working when Fortunato begins rattling his chains because Montresora is exhausted. Fortunato did not do anything to insult Montresor. The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as I best could, but when he ventured upon insult I vowed revenge. You, who so well know the nature of my soul, will not suppose, however, that gave utterance to a threat.

At length I would be avenged …. Amontillado is characterized by nutty aromas, tobacco, aromatic herbs and often ethereal, polished notes of oak. The dampness of the catacombs.

By screaming even more loudly than the hapless Fortunato, he is adding to the sense of terror that must be gripping the victim of his terrible revenge. Bear in mind that all this is happening in the catacombs, where sounds echo loudly against the cavernous walls. The climax of the story is when Montresor chains Fortunato to the wall of the catacombs. Montresor then ignores the screams of Fortunato for mercy.

This is a picture of Fortunato being chained to the wall, and a wall being built in front of him. Why does Montresor choose the catacombs as the setting for his revenge? No one will find Fortunato there. Why does Montresor repeatedly warn Fortunato about the bad air in the vaults? He wants to make sure that Fortunato does not suspect him. Montresor carefully plans out his revenge against Fortunato. He chooses Carnival as the time to carry out the murder because he knows people will be drinking and having fun.

He makes sure his servants will not be in the house, so no one will see Fortunato coming into his house. What did Montresor not do to prepare for revenge? In the last lines of the story, Montresor reveals that he has gotten away with the crime for something like 50 years: Against the new masonry I re-erected the old rampart of bones.

For the half of a century no mortal has disturbed them. I think he is talking to a priest. Montresor is obviously confessing his crime of so many years ago, and it appears that this is not the first time he is confessing the same thing.

He is retelling, with some delight, the details of his murder of Fortunato. Montresor is a person who has no conscience at all. He is confessing his crime to an unknown person, but he is not asking for absolution, he is almost giddy with what he had done. We see that he as an arrogant attitude because he did 50 years earlier , and has never been caught.

The insult is never named , or rather the "thousand injuries" were never named by Fortunato. We know that Montresor is an unreliable narrator because he never names the insults and his account of the entire story is so one-sided he cannot be entirely believed.

Fortunato considers Montresor a friend , but not an important friend. He considers him a competitor but also a potential partner in business deals. They are really "friendly enemies. Montresor hate Fortunato because he had been teasing Montresor and Montresor had had enough. Why does Montresor hate Fortunato? In "The Cask of Amontillado," Fortunato's weakness is his pride in his connoisseurship of wine. It is this weakness that Montresor exploits in order to lure Fortunato to his death.

Montresor stops working when Fortunato begins rattling his chains because Montresor a is exhausted. Montresor sought revenge on Fortunato because he had hurt Montresor for years, and now he has insulted him, and it has come to the final straw. He states he has a famous bottle of Amontillado, and wants him to look at it, so he gets Fortunato drunk enough to go down into the catacombs where Montresor can kill him.

Montresor wants revenge because one of his best friends insulted him for no apparent reason. Montresor tricks Fortunato by telling him he has Amontillado in his cellar but he doesn't know if it's the real stuff, and he wants Fortunato to test it. Granted, Montresor was jealous of Fortunato, because Fortunato was still rich and respected.

But, the last straw was Fortuanato's insult, probably committed unknowingly, that prompted Montresor's revenge. Why is Montresor telling the story 50 years later? Montresor is not confessing but writing a description of an event in his life of which he seems to be proud.

The fact that he has waited fifty years to tell anyone about it only is intended to demonstrate that he has gotten away with a perfect crime. Yes, Fortunato has been drinking and so his judgement might be impaired, but why would he be so happy to see Montresor if he spent so much time insulting him? Why would Montresor be happy to see him? Actually, Montresor is happy to see him because he has been planning his murder. It makes no sense though, that if Fortunato was really an enemy and had really done all of these horrible wrongs to Montresor that he would so willingly go with him.

The insults, or the thousand injuries, are all in Montresor's head. They are the product of a delusional mind. Montresor is a madman, and while madmen might make entertaining narrators, they do not make reliable ones. They do, however, make excellent murderers. Montresor carefully plots Fortunato's murder because he is convinced he has done him some horrible wrong.

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