Hi,
The narrator spends so much time in "The Tell-Tale Heart" attempting to justify the murder of the blind man because he is insane; he is a madman. The narrator of the short story tells the story in a calm way to try to prove his sanity. He tells us at the end of the story that he is not mad.
The narrator of the short story is, in fact, mad. He has a nervous disease.
Faith xoxo
Ne demek istoyusun anlamadım
Answer:
B. He wanted to make the poem more concise and direct.
Explanation:
Ezra Pound wrote a 30-line poem where he narrated his experience in a Paris metro station but he discarded this version because he did not like it.
Much later, he again tried narrating his experience, this time making the narration shorter than the first, but he again discarded it.
Finally, after reading Japanese hiakus, Mr. Pound finally wrote his experience in a two-line version that has now become immensely popular because of its length.
So, he reduced his poem from a 30-lined one to two lines because he wanted to make the poem more concise and direct.