The Black Cat: Setting, Characters, and Themes
Setting
Place: The story opens in the cell of a prisoner the day before he is to be executed by hanging. After introducing himself to readers as a man who underwent a horrifying experience, the prisoner writes down the details of this experience, which led to his imprisonment and scheduled execution. The events in his tale are set at his home and in a tavern.
Time: Although these events take place over several years, the recounting of them in writing takes place on a single day in the narrator’s prison cell.
Characters
- Narrator: Prisoner scheduled for execution. His loathing of a cat he once loved leads to his commission of a capital crime.
- Narrator’s Wife: Woman of agreeable disposition who likes animals and obtains many pets for her husband.
- First Black Cat: Cat named Pluto that loves the narrator but irritates him when it follows him everywhere.
- Second Black Cat: Cat that resembles the first black cat and may be a reincarnation of the latter—or so the narrator may think.
- Policemen: Officers who investigate the happenings at the home of the narrator.
- Servant: Person working in the narrator’s household.
Point of View
Who is telling the story?
The narrator tells the story in the first-person point of view. He is obviously deranged even though he declares at the outset of the story that “mad am I not.” He tells readers that excessive drinking helped to bring on his erratic, violent behavior. (It may be that the drinking worsened an existing mental condition.) The narrator tells his story as he sees it from his demented point of view.
Why, in your opinion, did Poe not give a name to the narrator?
As in many of his other short stories, Poe does not name the narrator. A possible explanation for this is that Poe wanted the unnamed narrator to represent every human being, thereby enhancing the universality of the short story. In other words, the narrator represents anyone who has ever acted perversely or impulsively—and then had to pay for his deed.
Main Themes
Perversity
A human being has a perverse, wicked side that can goad him into committing evil deeds. The narrator says it was this inner demon that brought about his downfall.
Who has not, a hundred times, found himself committing a vile or a silly action, for no other reason than because he knows he should not? Have we not a perpetual inclination, in the teeth of our best judgment, to violate that which is Law, merely because we understand it to be such? This spirit of perverseness, I say, came to my final overthrow. It was this unfathomable longing of the soul to vex itself — to offer violence to its own nature — to do wrong for the wrong’s sake only — that urged me to continue and finally to consummate the injury I had inflicted upon the unoffending brute.
Alcohol Abuse
Heavy drinking can bring out the worst in a human being. To be sure, alcohol abuse alone did not cause the narrator’s violent behavior. But, as he readily acknowledges, it certainly put him in a foul mood.
Vengeance
Evil deeds invite vengeance. Pluto gets even, the narrator indicates, by causing the fire that burns down the narrator’s house. And, if the second cat is indeed Pluto reincarnated, Pluto sweetens his revenge by alerting police with his crying behind the wall hiding the corpse of the narrator’s wife.