First, Le Guin uses vivid imagery to depict the city of Omelas as a vibrant and beautiful place. This is described as "the rigging of the boats sparkl[ing] with flags...between houses with red roofs and painted walls, between old moss gardens and under avenues of trees, pst great parks and public buildings, processions moved...[and] some were decorous." The description given to the readers to image Omelas suggests that it is a beautiful place where it is physical …show more content…
The people of Omelas "no longer can describe a happy man, more make any celebration of joy...[and] they were not naive and happy...though they were, in fact, happy." The happiness that the people of Omelas felt was happiness, but not true happiness. It was a robotic emotion that they didn't actually feel, but are forced to. Since their normal emotion is happiness, when it was time to actually feel happy, they felt no difference. They didn't understand happiness, they didn't know what it meant or felt like, although they were always feeling it. This makes the people complex due to the fact that they were happy, but they weren't.
Lastly, the Le Guin suggests the deeper flaws of Omelas through the exsistence of the basement child. "If [the child] were cleaned and fed and comforted...all the prosperity and beauty and delight of Omelas would wither and be destroyed." Before this part in the story, it shows the perfection of Omelas and their always, happy, emotion. However, the child is seen very different from the others. It feels emotions besides happiness such as being scared, unhappy, etc. This shows that Omelas isn't actually perfect, there is a deep flaw in which not much can tell right now away, but it is still