Table of Contents
- 1 What is misunderstanding of JB Boothroyd?
- 2 Where did the narrator go with his black car?
- 3 Who was Arthur who was Sheila slight misunderstanding?
- 4 Why did the narrator remove Pluto’s eye?
- 5 Was the narrator remorseful for his crime?
- 6 What image does the narrator see on the wall behind his bed?
- 7 Why does he hang the cat?
- 8 Was the narrator remorseful in The Black Cat?
What is misunderstanding of JB Boothroyd?
“A SLIGHT MISUNDERSTANDING”, is a story written by J B Boothroyd, a renowned English writer. The story is all about the instances of misunderstanding by himself, the narrator and of a farmer’s wife. The farmer but took everything rather well as he knew of his wife’s nature of carelessness.
Where did the narrator go with his black car?
Narrator’s dog barks at him but he manages to find narrator’s address by the reading the dog’s collar. He is happy to see his newly bought black car at the house of farmer who apologized for his wife’s carelessness. The next time narrator and his wife went for shopping, their car got replaced.
Who was Arthur who was Sheila slight misunderstanding?
The wife of the farmer was the named Arthur . His dog was Sheila.
Was the narrator in the Black Cat insane?
The opening lines of “The Black Cat” by Edgar Allan Poe are spoken by the narrator of the story, and he insists he is not insane; however, there is sufficient evidence to make the case that the narrator is suffering from some kind of mental illness.
What happened to the second cat after the narrator killed his wife?
Explain what the difference might represent. The new cat had a patch of white fur shaped like the gallows where the narrator hung the cat. The narrator picked up an axe and tried to kill the cat with it but his wife stopped him and in his fit of rage he turned to her and buried to axe in her head.
Why did the narrator remove Pluto’s eye?
The narrator cut out the cat’s eye because he was intoxicated. The narrator hanged the cat because he was crazy and he said he did it because the loved the cat and because the cat never did anything to him. What happened the night he hanged Pluto?
Was the narrator remorseful for his crime?
The narrator in “The Black Cat” is not particularly remorseful. It is as though he is aware of the heinousness of what he has done, of the foul crime he has committed against a woman who was patient and gentle and kind, but he expresses no remorse for it.
What image does the narrator see on the wall behind his bed?
That very night his house mysteriously catches fire, forcing the narrator, his wife and their servant to flee the premises. The next day, the narrator returns to the ruins of his home to find, imprinted on the single wall that survived the fire, the apparition of a gigantic cat with a rope around the animal’s neck.
Does the narrator love his wife the black cat?
Her love for animals seems to increase throughout the story. She even gives her life for the second cat at the end. This love seems connected to pity and perhaps guilt. When she learns that the second cat is missing an eye, like Pluto, this makes her love him (the cat) even more.
Was the narrator in The Black Cat insane?
Why does he hang the cat?
The narrator hangs the cat ‘in cold blood’ from a tree. The narrator cannot bring himself to hurt the cat because he is afraid of it. The white shape on its chest morphs into a gallows, a direct reminder of his crime against Pluto. Eventually, the narrator is driven so mad that he tries to kill the cat with an axe.
Was the narrator remorseful in The Black Cat?
The narrator in “The Black Cat” is not particularly remorseful. When he describes the murder of his wife and how he came to the conclusion of what to do with her dead body, he focuses more on how he felt to be rid of the black cat than he does on any feelings of regret or guilt for having killed his spouse.