There Will Come Soft Rains

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Half a century ago, Ray Bradbury issued an enlightenment in the short story “August 2026: There Will Come Soft Rain”. In E. M. Forster’s “The Machine Stops”, a similar enlightenment is made. Both edify people that things will go wrong when technology is dominant over humanity. Machines are meant to bring us a comfortable life, and technology is meant to enhance our living standard. Ours dependence on technology, however, in both stories lead humanity to devastate. The other edification in Bradbury’s story is that the beauty of nature will outlast a world without mankind. Humans are meant to protect our world, but humans have failed to do so and worse, we are the reason world is damaged. Those edifying messages are hidden in the setting and …show more content…

Use of technology is expanding from day to day, more things in life are depending on machinery. In “August 2026: There Will Come Soft Rain”, Ray Bradbury imagined the world in August 4, 2026. Humans are gone after nuclear explosion. But people are used to surround by machines. Their house is fully automated. The house, described in this story, basically did everything for owners. It is able to cook, announce time, report weather, housekeeping, daily planning, and read poem for owners, etc. Every movement of humans is relied on reminders of the machine: “Eight-one, tick-tock, eight-one o'clock, off to school, off to work, run, run, eight-one! …Rain, rain, go away; rubbers, raincoats for today…Nine-fifteen, sang the clock, time to clean. (Bradbury 1)” People are used to follow orders from the machine. That is to say, people lost their ability to think, ability to remember, and ability to take control. The house, Bradbury described, is people physical and mental leader. Unfortunately, this …show more content…

This poem delivers an idea that is the beauty of nature will outlive a world without humans and humanity. It is ironic that Bradbury chooses this poem considering the setting of his story, humans are gone, only left an automated house. Bradbury uses the poem, “No one would mind, neither bird nor tree / if mankind perished utterly (Bradbury 3)”, to mock the world he imaged. Even though humans are gone, nature lives on, the house keeps working and does not care humans no longer exist; Even though the house is able to last for some time, nature outlasts and does not care the existence of humans and their innovations, technology eventually malfunction and turns into rubble and steam: “even as the sun rose to shine upon the heaped rubble and steam (Bradbury 4)”. In the end, the house is destroyed, but the sun rises to a new day. Nature has no concern for humans, and will live without

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