The Man of the Crowd: By Edgar Allan Poe - Illustrated

Edgar Allan Poe

Overview

Why buy our paperbacks?<br/><br/>Expedited shipping<br/>High Quality Paper<br/>Made in USA<br/>Standard Font size of 10 for all books<br/>30 Days Money Back Guarantee<br/><br/>BEWARE of Low-quality sellers<br/><br/>Don't buy cheap paperbacks just to save a few dollars. Most of them use low-quality papers & binding. Their pages fall off easily. Some of them even use very small font size of 6 or less to increase their profit margin. It makes their books completely unreadable.<br/><br/>How is this book unique?<br/><br/>Unabridged (100% Original content)<br/>Font adjustments & biography included<br/>Illustrated<br/><br/>The Man of the Crowd by Edgar Allan Poe<br/>"The Man of the Crowd" is a story by American writer Edgar Allan Poe about a nameless narrator following a man through a crowded London. Plot Summary: The story is introduced with the epigraph "Ce grand malheur, de ne pouvoir être seul" — a quote taken from The Characters of Man by Jean de La Bruyère. It translates to This great misfortune, of not being able to be alone. This same quote is used in Poe's earliest tale, "Metzengerstein". After an unnamed illness, the unnamed narrator sits in an unnamed coffee shop in London. Fascinated by the crowd outside the window, he considers how isolated people think they are, despite "the very denseness of the company around". He takes time to categorize the different types of people he sees. As evening falls, the narrator focuses on "a decrepit old man, some sixty-five or seventy years of age", whose face has a peculiar idiosyncrasy, and whose body "was short in stature, very thin, and apparently very feeble" wearing filthy, ragged clothes of a "beautiful texture". The narrator dashes out of the coffee shop to follow the man from afar. The man leads the narrator through bazaars and shops, buying nothing, and into a poorer part of the city, then back into "the heart of the mighty London". This chase lasts through the evening and into the next day. Finally, exhausted, the narrator stands in front of the man, who still does not notice him. The narrator concludes the man is "the type and genius of deep crime" due to his inscrutability and inability to leave the crowds of London.

Details
CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
9781977556820
N/A
2017
EN
80 pages
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