The “Happylife Home” is personified throughout the story to show how the children no longer look to their birth parents to fill their needs and wants, so they disregard George and Lydia. In a desperate attempt for some kind of love and care, the children reach out to the only other thing they know, the nursery. Throughout the story the home does all the work leaving the family useless, never having to lift a finger. The reader learns that Wendy and Peter no longer feel their parents should have charge over them, Bradbury then starts to personify the room giving a glimpse of how the children might have started to see the nursery. The personification progresses the story, helping foreshadow the outcome of the
The “Happylife Home” is personified throughout the story to show how the children no longer look to their birth parents to fill their needs and wants, so they disregard George and Lydia. In a desperate attempt for some kind of love and care, the children reach out to the only other thing they know, the nursery. Throughout the story the home does all the work leaving the family useless, never having to lift a finger. The reader learns that Wendy and Peter no longer feel their parents should have charge over them, Bradbury then starts to personify the room giving a glimpse of how the children might have started to see the nursery. The personification progresses the story, helping foreshadow the outcome of the