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-โ (ur so silly :333)
BAHAH thank you
For all that Poe is characterized as soft (and rightfully so) Iโve always thought it was curious how easily he is given to violence, especially as it relates to Ranpo.
For the below analysis of Poe, I will be comparing Poe to the narrator of the Cask of Amontillado, Ranpo to Fortunado, and Poeโs novel to specific part of the catacombs where Fortunado was walled in.
Poe spent 6 years plotting the murder of a man who beat him in a detective competition, which Iโm fairly certain is a reference to the narrator in Cask of Amontillado (abbreviated hence as Cask)
when [Fortunado] ventured upon insult I vowed revenge
Fortunado is the man the narrator kills, and for a similar reason to which Poe wanted to kill Ranpo (humiliation). In fact, this entire first paragraph delves into reasoning that Poe follows in his revenge against Ranpo. Notably:
[A wrong] is equally unredressed when the avenger fails to make himself felt as such to him who has done the wrong.
And Poe makes it very clear to Ranpo that he felt humiliated by Ranpo, and what he felt humiliated by. He tries to make himself felt to Ranpo, and we see this with how he tries to remind the detective of their history.
Both Ranpo and Fortunado are:
1. Better than and are arrogant about a skill which the narrator also takes pride in. Ranpo is astonishingly brilliant (moreso than Poe) while Fortunado is someone who โprided himself on his connoisseurship in wineโ and the narrow is also โskilful in the Italian vintageโ. Ranpo also repeatedly brags about his intelligence/super-deduction and calls other people stupid, just like Fortunado insists that he is the better expert on wine than the other people the narrator brings up, and calls one of them โan ignoramusโ.
2. Killed (or attempted to be killed) by in a test of the aforementioned, shared skill. Ranpo is lured into a mystery novel while Fortunado is lured into a cellar to taste wine.
3. People who will be missed, โunlikeโ the killer. Ranpo is the agencyโs pillar while Poe works for the guild which is all โmoney and violenceโ. Poe even remarks that he envied Ranpoโs praise, and that he himself cannot stomach the world much. Fortunado was said by the narrator to be โrich, respected, admired, beloved; you are happy, as once I was. You are a man to be missedโ.
4. โLuckyโ people. Poe viewed Ranpo as lucky for being the holder of glory and praise and for being blessed with the super deduction ability, unlike the โdisgracedโ Poe. Fortunadoโs name literally means fortunate.
5. Locked in a place to die where others have already died. As the novelโs murderer, Ranpo likely wouldโve been one of if not the last person to die, and when he did heโd have died among corpses, much like Fortunado died in the catacombs.
6. Meant to be slowly killed. Since again, Ranpo(โs character) wouldโve probably outlasted everyone else itโs likely that it wouldโve taken a while for him to die, while Fortunado is literally walled into the cellar and presumably died of dehydration/starvation/suffocation/etc. Itโs also possible that has Ranpo not figured out the killer, he wouldโve died of the same cause (since, who knows if there was food in that novel).
To me, the above similarities that Poe is like the narrator as well. This in mind, and considering canon actions, I do think that Poe is intensely and easily given to violence when moved to be. However, I also think this happens only in regard to Ranpo.
However, I also think he is principled and intentional about this violence. He gives Ranpo a fair chance. He has all the Guildโs resources at his disposal and probably couldโve done more to kill the man of all he wanted to do was kill, but noโhe wanted to beat Ranpo at his own game. He wanted to redress the insult he suffered as the narrator of Cask did when he lured Fortunado into a game.
The narrator of Cask of Amontillado invited (did not force, only perhaps poke the ego of) Fortunado gave Fortunado plenty of chances to leave, even offered multiple times to take him back out when he began to cough / show ill health (though depending on interpretation, these may have been done to goad Fortunado into continuing). Similarly, Poe gave Ranpo a challenge (which he willingly took) and every chance to back out before he entered the book.
However, as Fortunadoโs desire to prove his skill in wine tasting led him to be walled into the catacombs, Ranpoโs desire for the Guild info led him into the book. From there, both of their situations were escapable (or at least they were meant to be).
Also, if youโre wondering why I think the novel is specifically the part of the catacombs that Fortunado was walled into (and not the trip down to the catacombs itself), just look at this image:
Bricked in, much like Fortunado.
All of this leads me to believe that to Poe, revenge was not about the ends, but the method. The ends had no meaning of the method did not address his revenge appropriately. Poe himself suggests this as well when he mentions that the Guildโs violence bores him. The Guildโs violence is just violence, but Poeโs violence towards Ranpo is methodical, intentional, meaningful, and cruel. This leads me intoโฆ
Take this scene from the Cask:
โEnough,โ he said; โthe cough is a mere nothing; it will not kill me. I shall not die of a cough.โ
โTrue โ true,
And this scene from chapter 32:
Itโs a bit subtle, but both killers reference that their victim is going to die. The narrator in Cask says โtrueโ because indeed Fortunado would not die of a cough, but of whatever killed him in the catacombs. And in Poeโs eyes (since he believed he would successfully kill Ranpo), Ranpo would โpractically die to secure that infoโ.
Neither of them feel guilt, or even give a thought about feeling guilt, for what theyโre doing.
I also want to note that I donโt think either the narrator in Cask nor Poe necessarily enjoy the inflicting of violence. They justโฆ do it. The violence is not blood or pain to relish in, but the vector of their revenge. When Yosano โdiesโ in the novel and Ranpo is anguished, Poe does not shout about delighting in Ranpoโs misery, but rather is just glad to have beaten him.
The violence is part of these two killersโ method, and the method does matter to them (more than the outcome, even), but the violence is not the part of the method that matters. It is an avenue through which the method is delivered.
As a closing note, I also leave with you the observation that we only get the name of the narrator of The Cask of Amontillado, Montresor, at the very end of the story (when Fortunado has been almost completely walled in), just as Ranpo only claims to remember Poe after heโs gotten out of the novel.
My personal thoughts on Poeโs relationship to Ranpo (IE, not analysis of Poe and Cask) will be below the cut.
โ
Poe is a little insane.
I really do like thinking about his desire to take violent revenge on Ranpo without actually caring about the violence part is a super cool thing to explore.
I also, again, think that this disposition to violence is Ranpo-specific; that Poe would not be as violent towards anyone other than Ranpo or unless Ranpo was involved. Ranpo and all his arrogance and brilliance. Ranpo as the loved, praised man he is.
I also do not think Poe wants to hurt Ranpo anymore, just for the record (and again I donโt think it was ever about causing harm, just satisfying his own vengeance), neither do I view him as possessive (I mean, we see him happily cheering for Ranpoโs intellectual prowess being recognized during the Perfect Crime arc).
What I do think is that Poe is willing to do just about anything for Ranpo, and to extremes. We see that he easily bets on Guild secrets awayโscrewing over the group that pays him an unholy amount of moneyโin order to have Ranpoโs attention and that heโll write entire books on Ranpoโs whims (I havenโt counted the number of books Ranpoโs used throughout the manga but itโs not a small number of entire novels written in what I assume was less than a year). And while we havenโt seen Poe be violent again, I do think itโs possible.
This is all to say, if you wanna know where my brain has been today, itโs been thinking up scenes like this:
It was plain to see that Ranpo was made to be loved. His voice was loud, his grins were broad, and no better was there ever a moment to celebrate than when he snatched up his glasses and declared,
โNow, my super-deduction will reveal the truth behind this case!โ
To deny Ranpo the right to be loved by the public was to deny who Ranpo was. Poe would have nothing else but the whole of him locked at the forefront of his mind.
I think this interpretation is also neat to think about in regards to the recent arc, but I didnโt have the brain space to write something like that today.
I have more RanPoe thoughts, but those will have to wait until a later post (as this is meant to specifically be focused on Poe, The Cask of Amontillado, and violence). Soon, soon.
To be explored in the futureโฆ Ranpoโs and Poeโs relationships to feelings of alienation.
Guild gang guild gang guild gang
More Poe doodles in various fashions ///๐๏ธ^๐๏ธ///
FOR THE LITTLE ASK THINGY YOU DID?? Edgar Allan Poe ๐ซถ๐ซถ๐ซถ
yup, you win ๐
Heey :D
Happy birthday, Sal fisher!!!!!!!
here's a little drawing I did for this special occasion
i might make a cake or cookies for him today
(He's alive trust)
Throwback (will be available as a mini print soon!)
I needed to share my thoughts
If you have any questions... No you don't
he irritating
I'm astrid (she/her)Ya can't take this cool critter anywhere!(I'll cry)
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