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An Occurrence At Owl Creek Bridge Essay

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Bierce's ability to effectively use the literary skill illusion gives the reader reason to ignore the impending death. Charles E. May perfectly captures the reason why illusion plays such a big role in "A Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge". He says, "... the story's theme- the human need to escape death- is established by Bierce in the only way it can be, by means of imagination..." (May, 1). The reader gets sucked into the story because they so desperately hope Farquhar survives. The reader easily gets caught because the flashback had them sympathize with Farquhar, and now they are imagining themselves in Farquhar's position. So when the story ends with, "Peyton Farquhar was dead; his body, with a broken neck, swung gently from side to side beneath the timbers of the Owl Creek bridge," (Bierce, 8), …show more content…

Bierce leaves little-to-no idle time for the reader to doubt the events occurring to Farquhar. When Farquhar falls, he is faced with problem after problem. First, the reader recognizes the hanging itself a problem. Then, once he is in the river, he has to untie his hands and dodge bullets and canon fire. Samide writes that, "... we focus on his immediate problem and forget to think about his unlikely escape...," (Samide, 3). Even after all the initial drama of his escape ceases, he is still faced with predicaments: "By nightfall he was fatigued, foot sore, famishing," (Bierce, 9). He has difficulty recognizing things, and fears he will not make it home. The reader is so occupied in his current issue that they fail to notice the oddity of the fact that he doesn't recognize the constellations, or that he didn't realize how dense the surrounding forest was. Meanwhile, Bierce includes these details to hint the reader in the correct direction, but he manages to almost counteract these hints by the use of emotional

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