There is no doubt that the concern Montressor expresses
for Fortunado's health is feigned. He wants to make sure that Fortunado has no
hesitation in following him deeper and deeper into the cellar. Hie is actually
unconcerned about the man's health, for he plans to kill him, but if he lets on that he
is uncaring then there is a good chance that Fortunado will just turn around and go back
up thereby foiling his carefully planned revenge,
At
another level, the feigned concern about Fortunado's health is not all that much
different than the feigned friendships that are mocked in this piece - the concept that,
in certain levels of society, people will treat you one way to your face and another way
behind your back. Poe was no stranger to this as the son of an actress. Although he lost
his mother when he was only two, he carried with him the stigma of being the son of an
actress - beloved on the stage but, in the eyes of society, not much better than a
common prostitute. Many of the people in Poe's life were hypocrites, and this gave him
plenty of fodder for writing characters who pretended to be or feel one thing when, in
reality, their interior motives were much different and generally far more
self-serving.
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