The Veldt, By Ray Bradbury

678 Words2 Pages

With today’s technology rapidly advancing in numerous ways, people are left with the question of whether or not these new electronic resources are truly aiding in the progression of mankind or if it is only preventing people from genuinely thinking for themselves. Ray Bradbury does an excellent job of focusing on the negative aspect of technology and how it could develop faster than the human mind is prepared for in his short story, The Veldt. In this short story, Bradbury is commenting on the overuse of technology in today’s society. The Veldt takes place in the future where just about everything can be done by machines, making human contact almost unnecessary, making this a science fiction short story. George and Lydia, the main characters …show more content…

In Bradbury’s short story, The Veldt, syntax is used to allow the reader some time to analyze the story slightly more than they would with shorter, less complex sentences. Bradbury writes, “Oh, occasionally they frightened you with their clinical accuracy, they startled you, gave you a twinge, but most of the time what fun for everyone, not only your own son and daughter, but for yourself when you felt like a quick jaunt to a foreign land, a quick change of scenery.” This quote is assumed to be describing George’s thoughts while in the nursery with Lydia, carelessly inspecting it for any abnormalities. The sentence structure is quite strange because of the length of the sentence. This sentence could be purposely choppy and long to create a type of franticity in the narrator's voice. This allows the reader to come to the conclusion that George is somewhat more frightened than he is willing to admit because of his fidgety and nervous rambling. In conclusion, syntax helps the reader come to conclusions that would otherwise be overlooked because of the implied tone created by the structure of the …show more content…

While the children are out and George and Lydia are eating dinner silently, George begins to have some rather gruesome thoughts about what his children were capable of thinking about. While Bradbury is elucidating George’s thoughts, he writes, “Remarkable how the nursery caught the telepathic emanations of the children's minds and created life to fill their every desire. The children thought lions, and there were lions. The children thought zebras, and there were zebras. Sun—sun. Giraffes—giraffes. Death and death.” This sudden thought of death when thinking of such innocent things only moments before creates a very abrupt change in mood. At first, George is simply trying to analyze why the nursery has had such a negative vibe lately, but when the thought of death enters his mind, it is almost as if it dawned on him that the children could literally be having thoughts about anything and everything. Although George believes that their thought are harmless to himself and others because they are only thoughts after all, he still wonders if their negative thoughts could be the cause of the macabre

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