: Look for Bradbury's use of vivid metaphors , such as the men being thrown like "wriggling silverfish" or "pebbles down wells". The title itself acts as a metaphor for the shifting, colorful, yet fragmented nature of human life and memory. You can find study materials on Scribd and Interesting Literature . 2. CBSE Class 12 " Kaleidoscope " (English Elective)
Spoiler warning, but the final scene is essential. One man, Captain Lespere, floats toward Earth’s atmosphere. He doesn’t rage against his fate. Instead, he thinks of small, beautiful things: a woman he loved, a cup of coffee, a morning on a beach. As he burns up in reentry—becoming a shooting star—a boy on the ground below makes a wish. The story closes with that wish. Bradbury suggests that even in utter destruction, there is grace. Our endings may be lonely, but they can still mean something to someone else.
A white star.
Click.
He remembered the lesson his grandfather had taught him forty years ago: “It’s all just junk, Eli. Broken bottles and leftover beads. But you give it a box of mirrors, and the junk becomes a cathedral.” kaleidoscope short story
He picked up the kaleidoscope again. He pointed it not at the ceiling light, but at the corner of the room where the large, bay window let in the gray afternoon rain.
A rocket ship explodes in deep space, throwing its crew into the void. With no hope of rescue, the men drift apart in their spacesuits, connected only by their radio headsets. : Look for Bradbury's use of vivid metaphors
Click. Click. Click.