The Veldt Literary Analysis

Words: 451
Pages: 2

Lions and Children and Death, Oh My!

“ “George,” said Lydia Hadley, “turn on the nursery, just for a few minutes. You can't be so cruel.” ” - Ray Bradbury, The Veldt

Lydia and George Hadley are responsible for their deaths in The Veldt by Ray Bradbury. After all, allowed technology into their lives, they bought things and they kind of sucked at being parents.

It doesn't surprise me that they had so much technology - sensitized lights, heaters, shoe lacers and shiners; the list goes on - but was it all really necessary for them to have? Buy some VR glasses or headsets and be done with it.
Also, what's the point in letting technology running your life? Life's purpose is to experience things for yourself. Cooking is fun. Reading is fun.
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Lastly, what kind of parent buys a helicopter for their children? Who let's said children go to a carnival across town alone in said helicopter? The only good thing Lydia and George did was forbid Wendy and Peter from going to New York in a rocket.
Plus, George and Lydia weren't very strict and didn't have a good discipline routine.
For example, when the kids broke into the nursery, George let them stay inside so the psychologist could see their patterns. And before that, they didn't have their homework done so George closed the nursery for a few days, which was basically cutting them off from their only real parent. No wonder those kids hated their biological parents.
They aren't responsible for Wendy and Peter. Lydia completely left the kids alone in the nursery even after she knew they had mental problems.
However, George and Lydia were trying to be good parents, the kind kids like. They were buying all these things for the kids. How were they supposed to know the kids would try to kill them? They decided to be better parents by taking authority and making disciplinary decisions by closing the nursery. They didn't know it would cause their untimely