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George Orwell Shooting An Elephant Summary

Decent Essays

Shooting an Elephant Have you ever had one of those situations that make you wonder if you are doing the right, moral thing? In the essay Shooting an Elephant, Orwell had to make a very difficult decision on whether or not to shoot an elephant that was causing problem in a local village. Despite not wanting to shoot the elephant, Orwell shot the elephant because it had killed a man earlier that day and did not wait for the owner to return. I disagree with Orwell’s decision to shoot the elephant because, I feel that Orwell over looked the fact that the elephant could have been startled by an unknown source and, that the elephant could have been calmed back down. In the essay, Orwell received a call about an elephant that had broken loose and was “terrorizing” a village. Orwell went to investigate what had happened and had found out that the elephant had destroyed a bamboo hut and ate some fruit from a venders stand. Meanwhile, the owner of the elephant was searching for the elephant in the wrong direction and it would be half a day before he could return to the village and retrieve his elephant. Later that day, Orwell stumbled across a body …show more content…

I believe that if Orwell would have done the test he would have found that the elephant wasn’t a threat and that it could have been saved. Orwell himself writes “It was perfectly clear to me what I ought to do, I ought to walk up to within, say twenty-five yard of the elephant to test his behavior.(90)” In other words, Orwell believes that he should have at least tried to test the elephant before he shot the majestic elephant. Ultimately, Orwell skipped a few steps that could have saved the elephant and not cause owner to lose one of his most valuable positions. The elephant was consider to be an expensive peace of farm equipment, but if it was dead, it was only worth its weight in

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