Vocabulary
Characters
Mood & Tone
Story Details
Comprehension
100

What does “nervous” mean in paragraph 1?

Afraid or worried.

100

Who is the main character telling the story?

The narrator.

100

How does the narrator sound in paragraph 1—calm or nervous?
 

Nervous.

100

What sense does the narrator say is very strong?
 

Hearing.

100

Why does the narrator say he is not mad?
 

Because he can tell the story calmly.

200

What does “mad” mean in the story?

Crazy or insane.

200

Who does the narrator live with?

An old man.

200

The narrator says, “How, then, am I mad?” What tone does this show?
 

Defensive.

200

n paragraph 2, what does the narrator say about gold?
 

He does not want it.

200

What is the narrator’s plan?
 

To kill the old man because of his eye.

300

The narrator says “acute” hearing. What does “acute” mean?

Very strong or sharp.

300

How does the narrator feel about the old man’s eye?
 

He hates it; it makes him afraid.

300

The narrator says he heard “things in heaven, earth, and hell.” What mood does this create?
 

Scary or creepy.

300

What time of day does the narrator go into the old man’s room?
 

At night.

300

What happens when the old man hears the narrator in paragraph 4?
 

The old man wakes up and sits up in bed.

400

In paragraph 2, the narrator says “conceived.” What does this mean?

Thought of or created in the mind.

400

Does the narrator hate the old man himself?
 

No, he says he loves him.

400

What is the feeling (mood) when the narrator says the old man’s eye made his “blood run cold”?

Fearful or chilling.

400

In paragraph 5, what does the narrator use to see into the old man’s room?
 

A lantern (light).

400

In paragraph 7, how long did the narrator stand still in the dark without moving?
.

For an hour.

500

The narrator calls the old man’s eye a “vulture eye.” What is a vulture?

A big bird that eats dead animals.

500

Why does the narrator say he wants to hurt the old man?
 

Because of the old man’s eye.

500

How do paragraphs 1–3 make the reader feel—safe or uneasy? Why?
 

Uneasy, because the narrator seems crazy and scary.

500

For how many nights did the narrator go into the old man’s room without killing him?
 

Seven nights.

500

What do we learn about the narrator’s patience from paragraphs 4–7?
 

He is very patient and careful, waiting a long time.