Monday, August 23, 2010

Edgar Allen Poe Tell-Tale Heart

Tell Tale Heart Animation

THE TELL-TALE HEART



Read The Tell-Tale Heart. Here are some untrue sentences about it. Change them into true sentences.

1. Because of his disease the narrator had terrible heating.

2. The old man had once hurt the narrator in some way.

3. The narrator decided to kill the old man because of his gold.

4. The narrator took thirty minutes to put his head inside the old man’s room

5. The old man could see and hear the narrator in his room.

6. The narrator felt sorry when he saw the old man’s eye.

7. The narrator pulled a heavy table on top of the old man.

8. He hid the old man’s dead body behind the wall.

9. The policemen came to the house because a neighbor had seen a strange man there.

10. The narrator told the police that the old man was away in hospital.

11. When the narrator spoke more loudly, the noise in the room became quieter.

12. The noise in the room was the old man’s watch.

In the Tell-Tale Heart a neighbor talks to the police. Put their conversation in the correct order and write in the speakers’ names. The policeman speaks first (Number 7).

1. _____ “This old man – do you know him?”

2. _____ “well, there was a terrible noise tonight from the house next door – like a great shout or a scream.”

3. _____ “strange? In what way?”

4. _____ “Hmm. I think I should go next door and ask a few questions. Thank you for telling us about this.”

5. _____ “I’m not sure – about two o’clock perhaps”

6. _____ I went to the window and looked out. I didn’t see anyone, but there was a light in the old man’s room.

7. _____”Now, sir, what’s the problem?”

8. _____ “So what did you do then?”

9. _____”He talks to himself – and he has really wild eyes.”

10. _____ “Oh, yes – he is a very nice man. A younger man lives in the house too – but he’s a bit strange.”

11. _____ “No, just one. But after that there was a loud bang – like something heavy falling to the floor.”

12. _____ “Two o’clock. I see. And were there any more screams?”






WILLIAM WILSON by Edgar Allan Poe


Read WILLIAM WILSON then answer the questions:


1. Match these halves of sentences to make a paragraph of seven sentences:


1. The narrator had to leave Oxford for Europe …
2. But in every city that he visited …
3. When he had evil plans, …
4. At first the narrator obeyed Wilson’s orders, …
5. This made him feel brave and strong…
6. At last, at a party in Rome, the narrator took his sword…
7. But when he looked at his enemy’s face, …
8. the other Wilson stopped them.
9. because everyone knew that he was a cheat at cards.
10. he saw that it was the same as his own.
11. and he thught that he culd break away from his enemy.
12. the other William Wilson appeared.
13. and killed the other man.
14. but he began drinking heavily.

2 . Here are four passages from Wilson’s diary. Complete them with the words below (use each word once), and then say who wrote each passage – the ‘good’ or the ‘bad’ Wilson.

1. I no longer play cards. I am known to be a __________, which is no better than a _____________. Once, what I tried to win a lot of money, I was ____________ and told to leave oxford at once. But the man that I tried to ____________ was saved.

2. At Oxford I was a clever and successful ____________. It was an easy way to ____________money. I used special ____________, which I hid inside my ____________. I only played with ____________ people, but sadly, one day I was caught, and so had to leave England.

3. Tonight the Duke Di Broglio’s ____________has agreed to meet me in a room ____________ we can be alone. She is young, beautiful, and not very ____________ - and tonight she will be ____________! I shall fight anybody who tries to ____________ me.

4. I spend my life searching for ____________. Tonight I have planned a ____________ meeting with the Duke’s wife. She is beautiful, but not clever ____________ to recognize an ____________ man when she sees one. Somebody ____________ warn her about me.

3. Who or what, was the other William Wilson? Explain your answer.

1. A real person – who happens to look just like the narrator

2. a different part of the narrator’s own mind

3. somebody that the narrator imagines, in a waking dream

4. the good side of the narrator’s character

5. a kind of ghost