How many stanzas is the poem?
What disastter has befallen the city and its inhabitants?
nuclear explosion
What happens in the house at 7:00am every day?
The house automatically begins its morning routine.
What war is the poem related to?
WWI
What would the nuclear tourist think of the house in Ray Bradbury's story?
It would be an interesting place to visit.
How many lines is the poem?
12
How does the house "feel" about the absence of humans?
The house doesn't seem to understand the absence. It continues with its routines which highlights its lack of consciousness.
Why does the house continue to function?
It is programmed to serve. It can't adapt to reality even though humans no longer exist.
Give an example of personification from the Bradbury story.
Many many examples.. I'll judge on the fly.
What does the bunker's existence and design represent in the Congress article?
It represents control and the ability for humanity to continue if there's enough technology to protect them.
How does the poet use language (diction, alliteration, figurative language, and imagery) to characterize nature throughout the poem?
1.peaceful, almost reverent imagery of nature conveys it as unmindful of and even superior to humanity
2. or how the diction of "fire" or "tremulous" might refer to the cruelty or obliviousness of nature (some may even discuss the possibility of "fire" being a reference to a phoenix, a frequent symbol of rebirth or renewal)
3.or how the use of alliteration contributes to peaceful sounds of nature (further suggesting its obliviousness to the destruction of war)
4. or the personification of Spring at the end of the poem.
How would the story change if it were told from the family dog?
The story would most likely be more emotional and tragic, focusing on the dog's confusion, fear, and physical suffering as it tries to understand why its masters are gone.
What is the metaphor in the poem?
stanza three= she compares a robin to fire in the line "Robins will wear their feather fire"
What is a metaphor from the story? You'll need to tell me page number and exact wording.
again.. I'll judge this on the fly.. You'll need to tell me page number and exact wording.
What seems to be the authors' attitudes toward war in all the pieces?
It's not a worthy endeavor. Pointing out how everything continues on after humanity is an attempt to show how silly humans are and that nature laughs at humanity for trying to control so much (so much so that we wipe out our own species)
What is the structure of the poem?
The author describes the natural world and then how nature would be affected if humans were gone.
Bradbury uses personification throughout the story (the house "quivered", "died"). What effect does this have on the READER's perception of the house?
It makes the house seem alive and almost sympathetic, which creates a sense of irony. we feel a strange pity for the machine even though it is just an object, emphasizing how technology has outlasted humanity.
What are the two most prominent examples of alliteration in the poem?
The repeated S sounds and W sounds
Give three examples of technology in the Bradbury story (written in 1950) that he PREDICTED that ACTUALLY exist today in homes.
1. voice reminders and routines
2. smart home programming
3. news reports automatic
4. programmed cleaning bots
5. automatic sprinklers
6.passwords to enter homes rather than keys
7. voice recognition
8. wall to wall tv (nursery walls)
How would Ray Bradbury's story be different if told from the perspective of the family dog?
It would be more emotionally charged and traumatic because we would see how much the dog misses his master (more so than we already assume).
What theme is the author developing through the poem?
Nature is indifferent to humanity.
The house "reads" Sara Teasdale's poem "There Will Come Soft Rains". WHY do you think Bradbury did that? HOW does that help the story?
The poem focuses on nature and how it doesn't care about mankind while the house represents the ultimate creation of mankind (technology) and is the only thing mourning the loss of humans. Then nature (fire and rain) destroys human's greatest invention (the tech house)
What kind of tragedy do the literature pieces AND nonfiction articles all have to do with?
Nuclear war.
What video game and television show are the poem, short story, and the nonfiction articles related to?
Fallout
How does the NPR article's description of the bunker as a symbol of Cold War preparedness relate to the anxiety Bradbury explores through his automated house?
The NPR article reveals government-level anxiety about nuclear annihilation—so severe that a secret bunker was built for leadership. Bradbury's house represents the ultimate anxiety response: a technological system designed to continue functioning even if humans do not. Both texts reflect Cold War-era belief that technology could protect against the unprotectable.