sword in hand takes a position in front of the group and “leads” them. The six-year-old boy finally made his way home. When he approached the house it was on fire. His mom was on the ground dead. The tale reflects Naturalism because it treats the subject with much less compassion or sympathy. The country setting and the plot produces the Naturalism theme. The objective of shocking the views of the time was definitely achieved. Bierce proposals a depressing view of bereavement and dying. This work makes the most of the shock value in numerous ways. Firstly, the reader is stunned and disturbed at the child's lively arrogance toward the incapacitated soldiers. The explicit imageries of the soldiers creeping along on the ground are even more alarming when you imagine a child trying to ride on the back of the injured men. The child's finding his mother's lifeless body in the most horrific way, the way her brains reek from the hole in her head. This was common to the Naturalism, but Bierce seems to cultivate some pleasure in providing every vulgar characteristic of the terror of war to me. The ending of the story delivers an even greater shock as you learn the reason for the child's weird behavior. The boy is actually deaf causes you to rapidly change your opinion about him.
sword in hand takes a position in front of the group and “leads” them. The six-year-old boy finally made his way home. When he approached the house it was on fire. His mom was on the ground dead. The tale reflects Naturalism because it treats the subject with much less compassion or sympathy. The country setting and the plot produces the Naturalism theme. The objective of shocking the views of the time was definitely achieved. Bierce proposals a depressing view of bereavement and dying. This work makes the most of the shock value in numerous ways. Firstly, the reader is stunned and disturbed at the child's lively arrogance toward the incapacitated soldiers. The explicit imageries of the soldiers creeping along on the ground are even more alarming when you imagine a child trying to ride on the back of the injured men. The child's finding his mother's lifeless body in the most horrific way, the way her brains reek from the hole in her head. This was common to the Naturalism, but Bierce seems to cultivate some pleasure in providing every vulgar characteristic of the terror of war to me. The ending of the story delivers an even greater shock as you learn the reason for the child's weird behavior. The boy is actually deaf causes you to rapidly change your opinion about him.