"But why will you say that I am mad?"  Many people believe that.
            
            
       the Narrator in "The Tell-Tale Heart" shows insanity, but I disagree. .
            
The Narrator, in his right mind, proves this through out the story. The mental .
            
status of the narrator in "The Tell-Tale Heart" shows complete sanity.
            
                      .
            
                      as proven through his actions, words, and feelings. .
            
	.
            
      .  One of the main points the narrator uses, proving his sanity, comes .
            
out through his actions "And every night, about midnight, I turned the .
            
latch of his door and opened it - oh, so gently!" This quote clearly shows .
            
the sanity of the narrator. Would a person out of his right mind wait so .
            
cautiously to kill? A mad man would naturally act on his first instinct, and .
            
murder the old man instantly.
            
            As another action, he proves his normality when he hides the .
            
remains of the body. An insane man would naturally be careless of .
            
where he put the body and if anyone knew of the murder. "If you still .
            
think me mad, you will think so no longer when I describe the wise .
            
precautions I took for the concealment of the body." The narrator tells the .
            
reader of his sanity in this quote, and then goes on to tell us how he hid .
            
the body. "I then replaced the boards so cleverly, so cunningly, that no .
            
human eye - not even his - could have detected anything wrong." The .
            
narrator was very careful in making sure no one knew he killed the old .
            
man, not resembling the natural characteristics of a mad man.
            
               Using words, he shows the readers his true .
            
identity emphasizing his normality. At the end of the story, the narrator .
            
confesses to the police his murder. His conscience comes into .
            
effect, causing his to admit his crime. Commonly, this behavior.
            
 of hearing a heart beat attains him to be mad. The narrator .
            
clearly says, "Villains! Dissemble no more! I admit the.
            
 deed! - tear up the planks! -here, here! - It is the beating.