The Veldt Literary Analysis

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The Veldt By Ray Bradbury, is a story that teaches the lesson that kids who are being overly loved or spoiled by their parents end up going off on the wrong path, making poor decisions, and just become rude and selfish. The story is a prime example of being over spoiled because Wendy and Peter, George and Lydia Hadley's kids were locked out of the nursery for just a couple hours Peter and Wendy threw tantrums, screamed, cried, and threw objects because they were so spoiled they got everything they ever desired. “you know how difficult peter is about that. When I punished him a month ago by locking the nursery for even a few hours - the tantrum he threw! and Wendy too. They live for the nursery.” That direct quote from The Veldt that is an example of how spoiled Wendy and Peter are, just from the nursery. An additional way that spoiled is the best theme for The Veldt is that after George told Wendy and Pete that the …show more content…

This is because George and Lydia Hadley were in great fear that the nursery was becoming more and more existent. This statement fails to account for why the nursery is like the way it is, its because of the children. An example is at the beginning of the story Lydia ask George to look at the nursery. When George and Lydia Hadley went to observe the lions seemed so terrifying. Therefore the Hadleys had to run away and leave the nursery for safety. While people might argue that screams planted fear into their minds, they forgot the fact that the nursery was locked therefore the fears couldn't have been real. Another example that could make fear the theme is that the night of which they were scared from the lions they both could not sleep. In the middle of the night the Mr and Mrs Hadley heard screams they recognized that came from the nursery. They were resembling death. That made Mr and Mrs Hadley have much fear and for that reason they planned to shut down their house and

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