When he is grabbed from the pit as he falls by a french soldier a the syche is about to slice him.
That would be the resolution, not the climax. The climax is when the suspense reaches the peak. The P & P sort of has two climaxes. One when he rolls of the table just before the pendulum reaches him but mainly as the walls close in and the suspense has built to whether he will be forced into the pit or not.
In "The Pit and the Pendulum" by Edgar Allan Poe, the narrator is rescued by General Lasalle, a French soldier from the advancing French army that overthrows the Spanish Inquisition. General Lasalle finds the narrator, who has been imprisoned by the Inquisition, just in time to save him from the descending blade of the pendulum.
The French army rescues the narrator from his prison in "The Pit and the Pendulum" by Edgar Allan Poe. They arrive just in time to save him from the descending pendulum, which would have killed him.
The narrator is rescued by General Lasalle, a French soldier who storms the prison and saves him just as he is about to fall into the pit and be killed by the swinging pendulum.
The narrator in "The Pit and the Pendulum" is rescued by General Lasalle, a French army officer who arrives just in time to save him from being killed by the descending pendulum.
General Laselle from the French army
General Laselle from the French army
General Laselle from the French army
In Edgar Allan Poe's "The Pit and the Pendulum," the prisoner is rescued by General Lasalle. He arrives with French troops who have liberated the prison during the Spanish Inquisition.
a horde of ratsa sharpened pendulum getting ever nearera bottomless pit with wall closing in.
In "The Pit and the Pendulum," the prisoner is rescued by the French army, which arrives just in time to liberate him from the dungeon before he is killed by the descending pendulum. The soldiers break through the walls and save him from his impending death.
"The Pit and the Pendulum" is a short story by Edgar Allan Poe that follows the narrator's imprisonment during the Spanish Inquisition. Key events include the narrator's initial disorientation upon awakening in a dark dungeon, his discovery of the pit in the center of the room, and his terrifying ordeal with a descending pendulum. The story culminates with the narrator's rescue from certain death at the last moment.
The third crisis in "The Pit and the Pendulum" occurs when the pendulum, a swinging blade, descends closer and closer to the narrator's body as he lies bound on the floor. This imminent threat of being sliced in half increases the tension and fear for the narrator as he tries to devise a plan for escape.
In Edgar Allan Poe's "The Pit and the Pendulum," the narrator discovers a mysterious pool of water in the dark pit, which saves him from being impaled by the swinging pendulum. He uses the water to moisten his bonds, enabling him to free himself and escape from the deadly trap.