"But why will you say that i am mad? The disease had
sharpened my senses-not destroyed-not dulled them."
this quote intrigues me, i think i like it so much because of the fact that it shows the narrators thinking. to him, being mad seems to have made him more aware, or so he says. in reality, he is trying to justify his reason for murder. the real question i suppose is;
Is he truly mad? or is that just the readers perception?
many would believe that he is truly mad. however, according to the narrator, he is perfectly sane. another question that comes to mind is;
have his senses really sharpened? or is this just the narrators perception?
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