Analysis Of There Will Come Soft Rains

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Ray Bradbury wrote the story August 2026: There Will Come Soft Rains in 1950, a doomsday story about a house surviving alone in a world destroyed by nuclear war. Time in which story happens is important because the world was still staggering from the effects of Hiroshima bomb. People were frightened because the bomb was so strong and they thought that what happened to people of Hiroshima can happen to them as well. Bradbury relies on this tale to inquire humanities reliance o technology. The house was built for the sole purpose of helping mankind. Regardless of house's godlike aspects, it cannot save anyone from a nuclear bomb. Then again house does not need any humans to keep operating -in fact; throughout the story it does not even notice …show more content…

Humanity might have lost to nuclear bomb but the machinery has not. Moreover, while family needed the house to take care of them, the house does not need anything from them. Nonetheless, as the story proceeds, the reader observes the house getting attacked by a fire. As it scurries to save itself, there is a sense of panic since each part of the house is activated. Door “tightly shut" and "blind robot faces down with the faucet mouths gushing green chemical". In the end, the house showers in fire and breaks down. The last surviving technology is the pale voice of the house, exclaiming the current day to be 1 August 5, 2026". While technology failed to survive, mankind eradicated long ago. There Will Come Soft Rains gets its title after Sara Teasdale's poem of the same name. By using this poem, Bradbury explains how small technology and nature concern for the survival of mankind. "Not one would mind, neither bird nor tree/ if mankind perished utterly/ And Spring herself, when she woke at dawn/ would scarcely know that we were gone." This is perceived as the story progress gradually, as the house keeps on living despite the fact that its owners are …show more content…

Mankind invented this technology to aid them, but the technology does not care if there are any humans or not. One of the most irritating themes in the story is the realization of just how "robotic “the house is. The house does not possess human emotions. From the start, reader can notice how efficient the house is- she stove ejects "eight pieces of perfectly browned toast, eight eggs sunny side up, sixteen slices of bacon, two coffees, and two glasses of milk", a voice notifies the family that the "insurance is payable, as are the water, gas, and light bills", the weather box announces weather and "an aluminum wedge scrapes the uneaten food into the sink", where they are cleaned. Despite looking very desirable, it is almost terrifying how far from being human the house is. This is unsubtle when a starving dog manages to find its way into the house. Rather than sympathy the mice are "angry at having to pick up [its] mud, angry at inconvenience". The dog smells pancakes cooking but the house will not let it gets its hands on them. When the dog dies because of hunger, the mice lacking any sadness push the dog into the incinerator. Ultimately, Bradbury alerts not the advancement of technology but complete reliance to

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