preview

George Orwell Shooting An Elephant

Decent Essays

The essay “Shooting an Elephant,” by George Orwell is about a particular day the narrator was living in British occupied Burma. The author tells about an event that still bothers him, in which he had a choice in whether or not to shoot and kill an elephant. The episode seems to still haunt him years later. The author seemed to write the essay in part to help himself cope with the act that he had committed. By his own admission, the narrator divulges that he does not share the same beliefs as the powerful government that he represents. Overall it seems to encapsulate his time well during the five unhappy years Orwell spends as a British police officer in Burma. Orwell was always free ultimately to make the morally right decision though, and writing this does not free him from brutality that was needlessly carried out. …show more content…

Many of the reasons he does not want to shoot the elephant are for the wrong reasons though. At the time he finds the elephant he says, “it is a serious matter to shoot a working elephant - it is comparable to destroying a huge and costly piece of machinery - and obviously one ought not to do it if it can possibly be avoided.” Doing a bad thing is not the same as being a bad person. By most accounts people regard Orwell as a great author. His most famous books focusing on social inequality. So the act he commits that this essay centers around did not tarnish his legacy. It also does not leave him free of blame either. At the time he shot the animal he says the “must” had worn off and was a seemingly docile animal eating in a field far

Get Access