preview

The Veldt Ray Bradbury Analysis

Decent Essays

You’re surrounded. The loathing heat coming from the sun almost seems real and is making you sweat. The dusty smell that comes with an african veldt fills your nostrils. Creeping closer and closer the lions are now 15 feet away. They bolt towards you. You run out into the hall and close the door before the lions can get to you. That room, you think, is too real. Of course it’s just a room, but it feels too real. Ray Bradbury’s story, “The Veldt”, takes place in a technology driven home. The house does anything its inhabitants tell it to. For example, there is a room, and the only thing in the room are crystal walls and a special computer. A special computer that is able to read minds. George and Lydia have given their children permission to use the room as they wish, but within …show more content…

Earlier on page 5, George had told Wendy and Peter to head up to bed. George Hadley looked in at the changed scene. “Go to bed,” he said to the children. They opened their mouths. “You heard me,” he said. They went off to the air closet, where the wind sucked them up like brown leaves up the flue to their rooms.” By putting this in the story Bradbury shows how Wendy and Peter were clearly told to go to bed. They obeyed at first, but later on decided their parents’ words meant nothing, and they were free to do as they please. Because George and Lydia haven’t made it clear that they are in charge and what they say goes, Peter and Wendy will do whatever they want. Earlier in the story, George was talking to Lydia about their situation. “I’m starting to wonder.” He stared at the ceiling. “We’ve given the children everything they’ve ever wanted. Is this out reward - secrecy, disobedience?” “Who was it said, ‘Children are carpets, they should be stepped on occasionally’? We’ve never lifted a hand. They’re insufferable - let’s admit it. They come and go when they like; they treat us as if we’re the offspring. They’re spoiled and we’re

Get Access