. . "Our World Entertainment, Inc." . . "Westlake House." . . "Horror tales" . . "Tell tale heart"@en . . "Tapestry horse"@en . "A visitor to a gloomy mansion finds a childhood friend dying under the spell of a family curse."@en . . "The Fall of the house of Usher"@en . . "The Fall of the house of Usher" . . . . . . "Short stories, American"@en . . "The fall of the House Usher" . "Horror fiction"@en . . . . . "Tell-tale heart"@en . . . . "The Fall of the house of Usher an NBC theatrical adaptation"@en . . . . "The Fall of the house of Usher and, the tell tale heart"@en . . . . . . . . "Fall of the house of Usher"@en . . . . . . . . . . "The fall of the House of Usher The tell-tale heart"@en . "The fall of the House of Usher"@en . "The fall of the House of Usher" . . . . . . . "The Fall of the House of Usher, originally appeared in Burton's Gentleman's Magazine, September 1839, is often considered Poe's masterpiece. Roderick Usher lives in a decaying family mansion with his sister Madeline. The narrator is an old school friend, summoned by Roderick, who finds Usher a dying man, depressed beyond cure and helpless with fear. The Ushers have decayed, and Roderick and Madeline have responded to the decay with a decadence which seals their fate, with the horrified narrator as solitary witness."@en . . . . . . "The fall of the house of Usher"@en . "The fall of the house of Usher" . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Audiobooks"@en . "Audiobooks" . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Horror radio programs"@en . . . . . . . . . . "Ghost stories" . . . . . "Fiction"@en . "Fiction" . . . "A short story by the master of the bizarre and the sinister." . "Edgar Allan Poe. The fall of the house of Usher. The tell-tale heart" . . . . . . . "1800 - 1899" . .