but why will you say that i am mad? now this is the point. you fancy me mad. madmen know nothing. but you should have seen me. you should have seen how wisely i proceeded-with what caution with what foresight with what disssimulation i went to work. I went to work. i was never kinder to the old man than during the whole week before i killed him and have i not told you that what you mistake for madness is but over-acuteness of the sense If still you think me mad you will think so no longer when i describe the wise precautions i took for the concealment of the body

Why does the narrator try to convince the reader he is not mad?
answers:
He wants to be caught before he kills the old man
He is angry about the situation
He is trying to justify his actions
He wants to get away with muder

1 answer

The correct answer is: He is trying to justify his actions.

The narrator spends considerable time trying to prove his sanity and rationality, indicating that he is seeking to justify his actions and the way he approached the situation with the old man.