Describe the portrait that the narrator saw in the room?
Answers
Answer:
The narrator is a man whose background remains a mystery for the reader: Poe reveals nothing about him other than the fact that he’s seriously injured and takes refuge in a chateau in the company of his servant, Pedro. In this chateau, the narrator is enchanted by a portrait of a beautiful young woman, whom he learns from a guide book was the wife of the painting’s artist. It’s can be inferred that the narrator is an educated individual who, like Poe himself, seems well-versed in the visual arts: he remarks, for example, that the oval portrait has been executed in a style similar to that of Thomas Sully, an American portrait painter, and has a knowledge of art terms such as “Moresque” and “vignette.” The fact that the narrator is suffering from “incipient delirium,” though, may lead some readers to question the reliability of his narration. The narrator ends up ironically falling into the same preoccupation with the woman’s portrait that the painter himself did. The story’s abrupt ending implies that he may have died in the midst of this, just as the painter’s wife died while he was lost in his obsession with capturing her beauty.
Answer:
➜The portrait that the narrator saw in the room was quite artistic and life-like. The narrator saw it when the rays of candelabrum fell on it. The portrait was oval-shaped with a beautiful picture of a young girl on it. Its frame was richly decorative. The young girl seemed just ripening into womanhood. The narrator seemed completely startled to find the lady's shoulder and head with radiant hair so real. The brushwork of tints in portrait seemed so real in the portrait. The narrator felt a sudden impulse to notice that portrait. He closed his eyes once and opened. He couldn't believe his eyes to see such wonderful artistic creativity.