How did Georage Orwell justify the shooting of the elephent
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The narrator himself admits in the end that he was not justified in shooting the elephant. He knew that he only did it to keep from looking like a fool. Others said he was justified because it had killed a man, but the narrator knows the truth. The elephant was no longer harmful - it's attack of must had passed. Before he shoots the elephant, the narrator says he knew he should just leave it...
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Orwell endured overwhelming bitterness and hatred of the natives because of his British heritage “the meeting faces of young man that met me everywhere, the insults hooted after me got badly on my nerves.” Orwell sums up his feelings of guilt coupled with his reaction against being hated “all I knew was that I was ...
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