Understanding "Cask of Amontillado"

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  • Опубликовано: 17 янв 2025

Комментарии • 684

  • @hanninhaifa8957
    @hanninhaifa8957 6 лет назад +266

    THANKKKK UUUUU im so terrible at understanding old literature

  • @MintBlondeVevo
    @MintBlondeVevo 5 лет назад +138

    You are the teacher that we need but do not deserve. Thanks a million

    • @drjewcumber
      @drjewcumber 2 года назад +1

      We need AND deserve her lol American education system needs improvement.

  • @AidanJMerriman
    @AidanJMerriman 4 года назад +123

    lesson learned: treat everybody extremely well with respect or else I will get killed in an underground burial with toxic mold.

  • @pigjuice6499
    @pigjuice6499 7 лет назад +216

    My teacher doesn't know how to explain shit. THANK YOU

    • @SixMinuteScholar
      @SixMinuteScholar  7 лет назад +4

      SuperGalaxyMedia Glad to help!

    • @soslothful
      @soslothful 6 лет назад +3

      What needed explanation? The story is a tale of insult and revenge.

    • @tcatking9761
      @tcatking9761 6 лет назад

      My teacher literally explains the exact same way

    • @tcatking9761
      @tcatking9761 6 лет назад +2

      @@soslothful if you just read the story it is VERY hard to understand, he's Edgar Allan poe, he is always hard to understand

    • @jamiesvlogs1729
      @jamiesvlogs1729 5 лет назад

      SuperGalaxyMedia RT

  • @erine7601
    @erine7601 9 лет назад +677

    God bless you for practically doing my homework 😂

    • @erine7601
      @erine7601 9 лет назад +28

      and good luck to me on the quiz tomorrow

    • @hibalee8457
      @hibalee8457 7 лет назад +5

      erin e where are you now one year later😂

    • @EDISONTECH
      @EDISONTECH 7 лет назад +7

      NOOO i have a quiz tomorrow!

    • @hibalee8457
      @hibalee8457 7 лет назад +2

      EDISONTECH awwww shit good luckkkkkk you can do it

    • @maddielukasiak9838
      @maddielukasiak9838 7 лет назад +2

      erin e SAME!

  • @karenpeterson4922
    @karenpeterson4922 4 года назад +73

    Wow, this was so helpful! Our school is closed to the pandemic and my son was reading this story and struggling--so was I. You explained this so well. Many thanks!

    • @SixMinuteScholar
      @SixMinuteScholar  4 года назад +10

      I'm so glad! Wishing you and your family well.

  • @kennethlipford7899
    @kennethlipford7899 9 лет назад +49

    I am in English-102 and your videos have been extremely useful. You have had a video for most every story I have had to read. Thank you sincerely.

  • @zVeLoProdigy
    @zVeLoProdigy 10 лет назад +287

    This video helped me understand the story way better thank you!!

  • @ronaldmiller5226
    @ronaldmiller5226 4 года назад +13

    This explanation was just what I needed. Trying to write a paper about The Cask of Amontillado and having trouble understanding exactly what was being said, proved difficult. Thank you!!

  • @juandrayo
    @juandrayo 9 лет назад +169

    I believe you are wrong in 1:50-1:58
    Montresor is not an easy man to insult. With the opening sentence, Montresor tells the audience he could handle the thousand "injuries" that Fortunato had given to him. He says when he ventured upon insult, he vowed revenge. One has to put oneself back in that time period. What was the insult that made him so mad? What was the biggest insult one can provide in the nineteenth century? The mockery of your family's name. Montresor is not a bad evil man. He is the head of a household who has been "injured" by Fortunato and who is ultimately put in shame because of the insults Fortunato provides. Several clues are given when he says to Fortunato "You are rich, respected, admired, beloved;
    you are happy, as once I was." It is possible that Fortunato did something which brought the wealth class of his family down.

    • @narminhajizada
      @narminhajizada 7 лет назад +17

      Juan Rayo Your statement is in a way better that hers. I'm likely to believe that his revenge has had solid roots.

    • @marshacreary9771
      @marshacreary9771 7 лет назад +8

      Juan Rayo I have to agree

    • @jebediahhonker-tonker5901
      @jebediahhonker-tonker5901 7 лет назад +16

      And Montresor's coat of arms and motto are kind of hinting to this as well, since they revolve around vengeance.
      (please ignore my being two years late. Lol I always love a good Poe discussion)

    • @dahuka
      @dahuka 5 лет назад +18

      I've always told my students to read this story like a religious mobster story - Montresor is a man of former means, his name and honor are all he has left. He is a lingering remnant of an outdated (pre-capitalist) social strata. Fortunato is a new upstart - successful and respected, but unaware of the unspoken social rules. Injuries may be part of the (political/business) game, but insult goes a step beyond and requires "immolation" (a sacrifice) to set right. This is underscored by Fortunado's drunken/reckless behavior contrasted w/ Montresor's cool demeanor, as well as the religious imagery of the foot/serpent coat of arms (Genesis 3:15) contrasted w/ Fortunato's membership in the Masons (a classic foe of the Catholic church). TL;DR Fortunato has broken class rules set in place by God himself, and it's Montresor's duty to right the wrong, as he says explicitly at the end - "For the love of God."

    • @kevindavis3234
      @kevindavis3234 5 лет назад +4

      I agree that money was involved. I always thought that Montresor had once been wealthy and had the respect of all the people in the town, but Fortunato somehow (either perceived or in actuality) robbed Montresor of his wealth and/or station. I see Montresor as a man who fell from grace and had very little left but his pride and his family estate.

  • @hebcole
    @hebcole 5 лет назад +9

    In the past, the carnival season was also an opportunity for revenge. I had many associates from the Caribbean who talked about people losing limbs and personal possessions. Enjoyed your commentary, great job.

  • @kiaralynn854
    @kiaralynn854 8 лет назад +12

    I know that this video was posted a long time ago, but my teacher played an audiobook for the class today, and I was so confused when Montressor was killing Fortunato. I didn't really get how he died, but after watching this video, I understand it a little more, so thank you!

  • @JoshuaHults
    @JoshuaHults 9 лет назад +25

    little add, that image of the heel and the snake it taken right out of Genesis. Genesis 3:15 " And I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers; he will crush your head, and you will strike his heel." "

    • @tcatking9761
      @tcatking9761 6 лет назад

      Lol ya I noticed that while reading the story

  • @cindystarkemdphd5433
    @cindystarkemdphd5433 6 лет назад +1

    I can’t thank you enough as a mom who is naturally good at math and sciences - for helping my kids with honors English! We watched your videos together nightly last year and my daughter got all A’s’ she understood all the stories on a much deeper level, and you saved her and me so so much time!!!!

  • @sonbal6793
    @sonbal6793 10 лет назад +2

    hi Ms.Rebeca, I'm from Philippines taking bachelor of secondary education major in english, your videos helped me a lot in my major subjects to aid abstract literary selections. Please continue to inspire people and love Literature. God bless!

  • @wennyt1
    @wennyt1 4 года назад +1

    I always look for your reviews on short stories before doing my homework! It helps so much to actually understand what I’m reading before writing about it!

  • @VoidedMirror
    @VoidedMirror 10 лет назад +21

    I read this in high school and I loved it. I was always excited when we got to read any Poe stories as a class.

  • @thatredhead7366
    @thatredhead7366 3 года назад +2

    So enjoyable! I love being able to discuss & learn about literature from such an educated source! Thank you!

  • @ryanphillips1278
    @ryanphillips1278 5 лет назад +2

    Fortunato didn’t think it was a joke.. he was praying it was a joke. He knew what was happening. And I got the vibe that he knew why it was happening because he never asked, “what are you doing?” He must’ve felt he deserved it on some level.

  • @juanpadill
    @juanpadill 8 лет назад +1

    wtf at people who dont understand what happens in this short story
    given im 30, but i read this short story when i was 13. This video (along with re reading the original) shed some new light- i though fortunato was always a drunk, i didnt understand their squab over the freemasonry bit, and the coldness over the narrators baiting.......very cool vid/explanation
    one thing that gets me, fortunato seems like a cool guy, were never given the explanation what it was that broke the camels back for the narrator. Given how easy it is to piss him off it coulda been some innocent remark. An innocent remark you or I could have made, to a person whose listening to a whole different frequency

  • @PaulDonaldRoy
    @PaulDonaldRoy 9 лет назад +35

    The moral of the story: it is better to have true friends, or no companions at all, than to keep the company of "frenemies". In real life, frenemies are commonly saboteurs. Cases of murder by frenemies are less rare than they should be. Fortunato would have been luckier than some of the real life victims of frenemy murder.

    • @quqianyu
      @quqianyu 4 года назад

      How do you define "true friend", how do you control their capricious minds?

    • @troodon1096
      @troodon1096 3 года назад +2

      There is no "moral" in this story, and we're never given sufficient justification, or really any at all other than he felt insulted, for revenge of this magnitude. It's just a story; Poe wasn't trying to teach anybody anything.

  • @paigehagemann4189
    @paigehagemann4189 7 лет назад +1

    This was a life saver thank you so much. I did not understand the story at all until I watched this. She is great at explaining.

  • @chipamos
    @chipamos 7 лет назад +2

    Have a middle school son whose been reading Poe in class. I took am a post-grad, but really don't understand Brother Poe very well. I'm a numbers guy. Your discussion really put it all into perspective so I can join my son in conversation about the subject. Thank You.

    • @SixMinuteScholar
      @SixMinuteScholar  7 лет назад

      Chip Amos Glad this gave you a point of connection with your son. Lucky kid to have an involved parent!

  • @WilliamMurray-lr1bb
    @WilliamMurray-lr1bb Год назад

    Great job ..... we've long lost touch with the classics and your insights are priceless .....

  • @josephgonzalez1902
    @josephgonzalez1902 10 лет назад +38

    omg u have videos for like all the stories i need

  • @evemaybs
    @evemaybs 10 лет назад +6

    Your summary/analysis was really helpful for my English class. Thanks!

  • @mariechrisvillamayor6728
    @mariechrisvillamayor6728 9 лет назад

    you have no idea how much you helped me with my report. This story was completly confusing until i watched your video. thank you very much

  • @linccoon
    @linccoon 3 года назад +3

    i really like this work of his, i find that some of poe's work (like the telltale-heart) is overused in schools and being explained over and over. With this story there are new character and i can see why some people like poe's work so much!! Thank you!

  • @zoepeters2749
    @zoepeters2749 9 лет назад +13

    Have you ever noticed Fortunato's name? It could mean "fortunate". We were talking about this in my ELA class. Think about it, Fortunato is so fortunate of being rich and very respected. In the end, he wasn't so fortunate...

    • @MatthewTebb
      @MatthewTebb 7 лет назад +1

      which, of course, ties in with Poe's use of irony throughout the story

    • @chipamos
      @chipamos 7 лет назад +1

      Fortunato = to favor, fortunate. Montresor (or Montreyori) = to learn, to teach

    • @reptilianviolinist
      @reptilianviolinist 5 лет назад

      In most of his stories Poe plays into irony and that is infant an example

  • @marycampbell8762
    @marycampbell8762 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you so much for explaining this story. I stopped reading the story and listened to the audio. I was still confused until you explained it in great detail. I appreciate you explaining this story because I was confused at first. I have to write a paper for my homework assignment.

    • @kallenssumague4390
      @kallenssumague4390 4 года назад

      Can anyone answer my question so i have a hw about this and i need help from u guyss soo plss answer
      •I NEED THE SYMBOL AND IRONY
      2 EACH AND THEIR MEANINGS
      I really need to pass my hw

  • @akstalder1
    @akstalder1 11 лет назад

    Thank you! I read this twice before seeking You tube help, to no avail. But hearing your explanation helped me understand it better. I read it a third time- much better! Thank you!!!

  • @ElMagno_CR
    @ElMagno_CR 4 года назад

    Thank you very much. I can't tell how useful this anylisis was for me. Definitely one of the best teachers I've ever payed attention in my entire life.

  • @stefanurquidi1492
    @stefanurquidi1492 7 лет назад +1

    8:15 montresor is also using reverse psychology to make Fortunato want to go down even more

  • @DividedLine
    @DividedLine 10 лет назад +17

    In regards to the bit about Masonry, Montresor must be from a noble family if they have a coat of arms and there is catholic symbolism throughout the story. Freemasons were usually modernizers, an aspiring bourgeoisie or rising middle class that emerged out of feudalism. They were protestant proto-capitalists who opposed the catholic feudal monarchy and the nobility.
    It was new money vs. old, basically, middle class vs. upper class. The name "Fortunado" refers to the fortune of the aspiring, while Montresor means "my treasure," as in the both social and economic wealth of the old-order aristocracy which stood in the way of the aspiring middle classes. At the end of the story, we learn that the murder took place half a century before, which would have been the period immediately after the ratification of the Constitution.
    To be anti Catholic in the 19th century in the United States was to be pro republican government and anti monarchy, so it's likely that mid 19th century readers would have understood Montresor as a symbol of a waning patrimonial aristocracy taking revenge on an up and coming republican modernity.
    In a symbolic and political sense, the "insult" which inspires Montresor to murder Fortunado would have been the republican revolt against monarchy, which took place throughout Europe and the Americas at the end of the 18th century. In another sense, you can read it as the "insult" of up and coming and inferior social classes challenging the role of the nobility and attempting to replace them. As Montresor is laying the bricks, he ironically refers to Fortunado as "noble," meaning that Montresor had now become the mason and it was Fortunado who would be buried with the nobility he aspired to be like.
    I'm actually related to Mr. Poe on my mom's side of the family. Half of them are proud of it, the other finds it embarrassing. My grandfather called Poe a "drunken cousin fucker."

    • @patienceparadox2314
      @patienceparadox2314 6 лет назад +1

      The last sentence just goes to show that from even the most dissolute and troubled of men can come creativity and genius....

  • @kathrynlucia5625
    @kathrynlucia5625 6 лет назад +3

    This was awesome! I have always thought that the line “You who so well know the nature of my soul” coupled with the fifty years might mean that this is a deathbed confession to his priest. He couldn’t die without telling someone, but he does not fear that the priest will reveal his secret to any authorities. Just a theory.

    • @demogog3449
      @demogog3449 5 лет назад +1

      He is speaking to us, the reader, with that line.

  • @amberwatrous3953
    @amberwatrous3953 9 лет назад +1

    This is the second video I have watched of yours for my American Lit reading, and both have helped me work few some questions I had. Very helpful.

  • @mmbris
    @mmbris 5 лет назад +1

    Fortunato was already drunk when the narrator lured him.

  • @The420DeLiRiUm
    @The420DeLiRiUm 5 лет назад +1

    So not the literary genius of Poe, but rather the lyrical flow of Epic Rap Battles of History led me to this video.

  • @bhillearanil1305
    @bhillearanil1305 8 лет назад +1

    Thank you for this! I've always had a hard time understanding it since high school because English is not my first language and we'll have this story for our Literary Criticism midterms but then, I found this! I owe you. Thank you!

  • @HappyMagicalMan
    @HappyMagicalMan 10 лет назад +14

    Your assessment of the family crest is backwards. The foot is the insult, the snake which is being crushed is getting back for this insult by biting the heel that steps on there honor. It also is a point by Poe that Montrasoui is a cold blooded serpent.

    • @SixMinuteScholar
      @SixMinuteScholar  10 лет назад +2

      Ah. Thanks for that correction!

    • @HappyMagicalMan
      @HappyMagicalMan 10 лет назад +1

      SixMinuteScholar With that exception the post is perfect. And even that is not actually that far off, I only know that point because I have dune much study when it comes to family crests, and there are a number of families that share part of the one at hand. And they all have the same general feeling. Also your other Videos are quite nice as well.

    • @rokujones
      @rokujones 9 лет назад

      William Moore Honestly, it seems like the image can be interpreted in both ways. Either one seems to work in describing the actions of the narrator of the short story.

    • @HappyMagicalMan
      @HappyMagicalMan 9 лет назад +1

      Roku Jones Indeed. But the context of the story implies that its the snake that represents the family. Sense the point of the crest is that you can step on the snake, but you will be bitten.

  • @matthewgabbard6415
    @matthewgabbard6415 4 года назад +2

    Amontillado is Port, which is a fortified wine from Portugal. Similar to Sherry and Madiera

  • @ferrari7108
    @ferrari7108 8 лет назад +3

    i read that book got me thinking about what kinda shit they were smoking back then to be writing this

  • @400cabal
    @400cabal 2 года назад

    I graduated uni a few years ago but I recently remembered reading the story back in high school so I went on an internet dive and came across your video. Great explanation!

  • @ixtoc999
    @ixtoc999 8 лет назад

    Teacher Balcárcel, I just loved this story, getting back to a guy ther hurt us," Nemo me impune lassecit". I watch it over and over and I keep loving it. Edgar Alan Poe is my hero.

  • @1deejayemmm
    @1deejayemmm 8 лет назад +15

    His coat of arms is from Genesis when God tells the serpent that he shall bite God's foot, but His heel will crush him (Christ). This is the central focus of good vs. evil in Scripture.

    • @soslothful
      @soslothful 3 года назад

      I think if you revisit the text you will find the curse is the serpent will bruise the heel of the off spring of Adam and Eve, not God's heel, and they will bruise the serpents head.

  • @magicknight13
    @magicknight13 2 года назад

    Thank you for your excellent and insightful analysis! You give such a warm special feeling to your videos

  • @angelwarf727
    @angelwarf727 9 лет назад +10

    Thank you! This helped me totally understand the story. Before I had no idea what the heck was going on the whole time I was reading it.

    • @kalinacore
      @kalinacore 4 года назад

      Same LMAOO like i read it but i didn't even get whats happening i didn't even know he killed the other dude when i read it by myself.

  • @annab.8739
    @annab.8739 8 лет назад

    I am writing a paper about symbolism in "The Cask of Amontillado" and this a huge help in explaining the story. I am a sophomore in college and although I have read the story once before in high school I still needed some assistance understanding it, especially since my English class is online! Thank you so much!

  • @arturorobles6402
    @arturorobles6402 9 лет назад

    this explanation , offers yet another amazing perspective and clearly solidifies the entire sinister plot! thank you

  • @sarahkaloti8515
    @sarahkaloti8515 9 лет назад +8

    You're better than my teacher, thank you a lot .

    • @kamranward1389
      @kamranward1389 7 лет назад

      Good looking out we read this in school but I didn't good looking out

  • @MarelisaFabrega
    @MarelisaFabrega 6 лет назад +1

    This was a very good analysis. I have one point of disagreement with you. It's at 13:00 when you say that for a while Fortunato thought it was a joke. By this time Fortunato has realized what is happening. He says that they will laugh about this over wine in a sad tone. Fortunato knows he will never drink wine again. He's just trying to deal with the inevitable in the best way he can, and trying to keep his dignity.

  • @conorsmith2705
    @conorsmith2705 3 года назад

    i tried reading the story for he but i couldn’t understand. This was the best summary on youtube explaining all the small details and keeping it as short as possible

  • @geenadavis4993
    @geenadavis4993 6 лет назад +2

    Thank you for your interpretation. I am well out of high school but I am starting to work my way through the classic great American Literature. This one definitely gave me a fright before bed last night. My final thought is perhaps he is telling another victim before they die. He relives his first kill when he tells his next kills. Just a thought. He seemed very much like a serial killer having his first kill.

  • @barnabywylde2224
    @barnabywylde2224 7 лет назад +2

    I believe that Montressor's story is being addressed to his confessor/ priest because of the line; you who know my soul so well. Also, the insult Montressor is so aggrieved by is probably because Fortunato black balled him from becoming a Free Mason which would have greatly diminished Montressor's economic and social status. Or possibly Montressor incorrectly believes Fortunato black balled him which would explain why Fortunato tested him with a secret hand signal which to Montressor would have been just another insult from Fortunato, a taunt for not being a Free Mason and Poe used subtle irony by having Montressor use literal masonic skills to kill Fortunato.

  • @TheSuperQuail
    @TheSuperQuail 3 года назад +1

    I disagree that Fortunato was dead before the final stone -- I think he'd either been broken or come to accept his horrid fate.

  • @SixMinuteScholar
    @SixMinuteScholar  11 лет назад

    We don't actually know how long ago the insult occurred. Sorry if I gave a misleading number! Montresor simply says, "at length," and explains in the beginning that he didn't utter a threat right away, but just bided his time. Eventually, he would get back at Fortunato, but he was in no rush. Chilling, isn't it?!

  • @Delzaleon
    @Delzaleon 3 года назад +1

    "Amontillado" - Fortunado

  • @aluel3721
    @aluel3721 3 года назад +1

    Great explanation, for some reason I cannot grasp the details from these short stories but this helped me a LOT. Wish you were my english teacher!!

  • @1966gto1000
    @1966gto1000 11 лет назад

    Good job Rebecca. Poe's ability at writing was so smacking at genius it was easy for the reader to get lost and lost ability to interpret....even a simple story such as this. What with the vocabulary and such - which is so exquisite - the reader at time needs an interpreter to sort it all out. Again, good interpretation.

  • @zshu95
    @zshu95 11 лет назад

    I love your way of communicating with the audience. Keep making these videos just like this and thanks for the help.

    • @SixMinuteScholar
      @SixMinuteScholar  11 лет назад

      Thanks and you're welcome. :-) I'll try to keep making good ones!

  • @chrisrivera2666
    @chrisrivera2666 10 лет назад

    Thank you so much for taking the time to make this video! :)

  • @haifal-gahtani5299
    @haifal-gahtani5299 10 лет назад

    SixMinuteScholar tahnks so much im a freshman and I took it in literature and didnt understand a thing you helped me a lot keep doing what u do thnx u saved me

  • @nursafitridewi9497
    @nursafitridewi9497 4 года назад +1

    This is really help me to do my college assignment. It's so clarity to understand the story because i'm really bad at old english. Thanks a lot~

  • @dejalewis5010
    @dejalewis5010 6 лет назад

    I literally never would have understood this if I never watched this video. GOD BLESS YOU WOMAN!!

  • @suchie6477
    @suchie6477 9 лет назад

    You are awesome, thank you so much for putting these videos on here, I appreciate it.

  • @tgmolitor6215
    @tgmolitor6215 11 лет назад +4

    "You, who so well know the nature of my soul, will not suppose, however, that I gave utterance to a threat."
    Is this a direct address to the reader implying we are very familiar already with Montresor, the narrator?

    • @SixMinuteScholar
      @SixMinuteScholar  11 лет назад +3

      Yes, I'd say so. We're the friend that he is confiding in -- or bragging to. Good observation.

  • @PantheonProjects
    @PantheonProjects 7 лет назад +1

    Thank you so much! Your analysis clears the story up so much

  • @Isabella-ko7fc
    @Isabella-ko7fc 10 лет назад +1

    Amazing review - best one that I could find! Thanks so much, looking forward to many more.

  • @charlesc.mcdonald4545
    @charlesc.mcdonald4545 7 лет назад +1

    very glad to have listened, already knew what the story meant but i could just tell you were going to explain very nicely, charming voice to match a charming face

  • @Makeup-eo8yj
    @Makeup-eo8yj 9 лет назад

    Thanks for taking your time to do this helped 100x better!

  • @alyssa_with_an_a
    @alyssa_with_an_a 4 года назад

    Started uni and this video is a lifesaver. I struggled to understand the story...but not anymore. Thank you!!!!

  • @kagekun1198
    @kagekun1198 3 года назад

    One point that you may have left out is the psychological aspect of the revenge. What Montressor really wanted was to see Fortunato beg and grovel for his life. It's not enough that Fortunato dies. He needs insult to the injury. He got that partly when Fortunato started screaming and Montressor relished it so much that he stopped his work and began screaming even louder than Fortunato in mockery. But then after Fortunato's little denial speech and when the wall was more than halfway done, he went silent. And *that* got to Montressor more than any other act of defiance would have done. That denied any psychological pleasure Montressor wanted from the deed, so much so that once the wall was almost done with only a few bricks left, Montressor even called out to Fortunato two times to get a reaction, but all he last heard from him was the jingling of Fortunato's hat. The narration even mentioned that Montressor started to feel sick but he passed it off as the catacomb's damp rather than the weight of the deed he was doing. He tossed down a lit torch through the remaining hole and bricked it up. At the very least, Fortunato asphyxiated to death rather quickly compared to dying of thirst after being buried alive. Thank heaven for small mercies.

  • @DanceThreat
    @DanceThreat 10 лет назад +11

    Thank you so much ma'am I have an essay to do on this short story and I didn't have a single clue what it was about in detail but you helped me so much!!!!!!

  • @gabrielolivaresguerrero9783
    @gabrielolivaresguerrero9783 5 лет назад

    I am in English-102 and your videos have been extremely useful. Thank you. You are awesome.

  • @henluvwitaragerrr4756
    @henluvwitaragerrr4756 6 лет назад +1

    you have my subscription!! you’ve helped me with a huge project, thank you so much! Nobody could have explained it better!!

  • @destiny4548
    @destiny4548 8 лет назад +1

    I can't thank you enough for this! I couldn't understand it for the life of me but I've got it now.

  • @AJsingingchic
    @AJsingingchic 10 лет назад +5

    Thank you! You really have a gift for making stories come alive and simplifying them for clueless people like myself.:)
    I'm wondering...
    Why didn't Montresor describe the "thousand injuries" of Fortunato? Is it possibly because Montresor is over-exaggerating these insults in order to justify his revenge?

  • @britzzz82
    @britzzz82 10 лет назад

    thanks :D My fear in reading poems and stories lessen because of your magic in explaining it in detail. I truly understand it now.

  • @HeidiReinhofer
    @HeidiReinhofer 10 лет назад

    Wow.. this was a very in-depth and interesting way of describing "The Cask of Amontillado". I'm glad I found this, because my high school is doing the play, and cast me as Montresor. This video really helps me understand the play more, thank you, I appreciate it. And please, keep making videos! :)

  • @magicknight13
    @magicknight13 2 года назад

    Making me miss my junior high and high school English classes!! I loved reading this story in eleventh grade

  • @xxcupcakes005xx
    @xxcupcakes005xx 11 лет назад +1

    Thank you so much this really helped! You are such a good person helping us even when you do not have to. Some of my current teachers do not even give me the time of day! You made my life just that much better! Thank you I really appreciate it!:)

    • @SixMinuteScholar
      @SixMinuteScholar  11 лет назад +2

      Wow, I'm so thankful for your comment! You are so welcome!

  • @PaulKyriazi
    @PaulKyriazi 11 лет назад +2

    Outstanding. Great info and entertaining. I agree with you. I think the hero of the story wanted to brag and figured he was too old and the deed was to old for anyone to come and arrest him. I like how you compared a cask of that wine to something cool on ebay. Now there's a story: "The Special Ebay Item". (used to lure a transgresser to go bankrupt)

    • @SixMinuteScholar
      @SixMinuteScholar  11 лет назад

      Haha! That would make an interesting story, all right. :-)

  • @HeleneLouise
    @HeleneLouise Год назад

    Maybe we're to understand that Fortunato died of the illness that he was playing down, thus depriving Montessori of revenge since Fortunato was not actually killed by him, but by illness. Great video. Thank you

  • @kierramakayla4497
    @kierramakayla4497 9 лет назад

    as I know this video is quite a few years old it seriously helped me! Currently taking English 102, mainly a lit class and I will definitely be coming back to your page!

  • @PaulDonaldRoy
    @PaulDonaldRoy 9 лет назад +1

    This story reminds me of The Count of Monte Cristo, with one difference being that karma comes to the man who "murdered" Dantes, while we can only speculate what happens to Montressor, other than that he lives for decades afterward. There is no suggestion that Montressor ever regains his stature, and that had to have bothered him, even if he did get away with his murder of Fortunato.

  • @1966gto1000
    @1966gto1000 11 лет назад +1

    Famous ancient Chinese quote: Revenge is a dish best served cold i.e. give it a while before you strike back. Too fast a retribution would arouse suspicion, and perhaps backfire. In this case, possible a couple of years had gone by since the initial insult.

    • @SixMinuteScholar
      @SixMinuteScholar  11 лет назад

      Yes, I agree. He waited for the right moment -- chilling!

  • @NeonAtary777
    @NeonAtary777 6 лет назад

    I'm happy I found your channel! It's a great help!

  • @DrewLambright
    @DrewLambright 7 лет назад +1

    Your videos have helped me so much in my first college English class. Thank you!

  • @knayacoco2624
    @knayacoco2624 5 лет назад +1

    This explanation was very clear. Thank you very much.😊

  • @henryknoepfle1635
    @henryknoepfle1635 10 лет назад +1

    Thank you for your review of the story. I looked up many words to be sure I fully understood them in the context they were used. I thought I understood the story but your explanation called to my attention things I had not really locked on to. I am going to do an interruptive reading of this story at my Toastmasters Club and you have helped my prepare for that. Thank you, thank you thank you.

    • @SixMinuteScholar
      @SixMinuteScholar  10 лет назад

      Good luck! You're welcome. Sounds like you already gave this piece a careful reading. Hope you blow their socks off!

  • @rg360drummer3
    @rg360drummer3 3 года назад +1

    Thank you so much. You helped me with my notes homework and test that I have for my class.

  • @SovietRussia777
    @SovietRussia777 4 года назад

    This was so helpful. I read it twice and was so confused on what was happening

  • @CosmicStargoat
    @CosmicStargoat 8 лет назад

    One of my favorite stories. It is so exquisitely ruthless, even for Poe.

  • @sling247
    @sling247 9 лет назад

    That was very helpful. I appreciate your style in the description of the story. Thanks

  • @shreyar4413
    @shreyar4413 4 года назад +1

    This video was from 2013(A better time) but still helped so much ty!

  • @jamesmcguire5059
    @jamesmcguire5059 4 года назад

    I have very much enjoyed your previous analysis on numerous texts. I was wondering if you had an analysis of The Open Boat by Stephen Crane?

  • @TheFVSousa
    @TheFVSousa 7 лет назад

    The greatest irony in it is that he never explained to Fortunato why he was liking him. You’d expect he’d explain what happened that he felt so insulted...

  • @coltinlara9895
    @coltinlara9895 5 лет назад +1

    I’m listening to this in class . Thank you

  • @demogog3449
    @demogog3449 5 лет назад

    The insults were Fortunado's perceived good fortune despite imbibing in excess and focused on aesthetics.

  • @hughjarsoll
    @hughjarsoll 3 года назад

    Going through a Poe phase (as opposed to a po face) and this is as good a summation as is possible. Also the audio combination of Sir Christopher Lee reading it is the perfect combination.