And even in the face of the overwhelming and devastating effects of technology-the atom bomb, which has reduced the natural world to a radioactive wasteland of “rubble” and “ashes”-Bradbury suggests that nature will prevail. Since nature is vast and self-sustaining, it cannot brake or run out of fuel the way machines do. The poem by Sara Teasdale paints a picture of nature persisting even when everything men ever created has died away. In the end, nature can persist without technology, but the reverse is not true. The eventual ease with which technology is outdone by nature suggests that it was arrogant and foolish to attempt to challenge the natural order in the first place. Bradbury seems to suggest that the victory is justified-that the arrogance of technology is finally being subdued. Though the house attempts to defend itself, the fire is described as “clever” and ultimately overpowers the upstart domicile. While the house is sleeping, nature launches its attack by letting a tree fall on the home, causing the fire. After a day of fussing over the artificial environment that the house has created, the home settles in for the night. The house ultimately fails because its water reserves are depleted, meaning that it can’t put out the fire that consumes it.ĭespite presenting an alternative to the natural order, technology ultimately looks weak compared with nature. Furthermore, technology cannot exist without the raw materials that nature provides: the house has been built out of oak, wired with metal tubes, and it’s powered by the natural force of electricity. Machines in the house are often likened to animals, suggesting that nature has already created perfect “machines” that humanity simply is attempting to copy for its own ends. This technology is created in nature’s image and fueled by natural resources. Yet even as technology tries to subdue nature, it can’t help but rely on it. And when fire-fighting fails, voices cry out in warning, as a lookout might upon spotting enemy troops. “Blind robot faces” spray green fire repellent. Mechanical doors shut against fire in an act of self-defense. For instance, when a fallen tree causes a house fire, machines come out in full force to battle the hostile foe. When nature threatens to destroy it, technology is able to put up a comprehensive defense. Comically, the narrator describes the stern response of the house to a sparrow brushing up against the window: “No, not even a bird must touch the house!” This protective impulse turns sinister when the house dispassionately disposes of the family dog’s carcass, treating the pet as nothing more than some smelly bio-matter. It shuts itself whenever “lonely foxes and whining cats” get too close. This house even seems to take its responsibility to battle nature a bit too far. The house protects its residents from the forces of nature: its walls close out harsh weather, its kitchen machines spare humans from hunting and foraging in the wilderness, and the cleaning mice ward off the chaos of the outdoors, cleaning up the mud, dust, and hair that accumulate in a natural environment. By having the house ultimately succumb to a fire and be destroyed by the natural world, Bradbury suggests that nature is more powerful than whatever man can create.īradbury physically establishes the animosity between the house-a symbol of technology-and the natural world. To do so, however, it relies a great deal on the natural world, both for inspiration (many of its automated functions, such as the robot mice, are based on animals) and for the raw materials to keep running. The automated house of Bradbury’s story presents itself as the perfect environment for human beings-a space that readily caters to nearly every imaginable need.
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