The theater is the perfect place for people to get away from their daily lives. They seized opportunities to see artworks called dramas. In 1956, playwright Gore Vidal wrote an interview about Little Planet. Before you fully understand the information the author is trying to communicate, you must thoroughly review dramatic works. In order to understand why he is writing a script, it is necessary to explore the life of Gorebidal. Criticism played a very important role in considering these masterpieces.
"You are a barbarian," Clayton said, visiting asteroids in the play. In the drama, Clayton, a character from another era or dimension, seems to understand or even not recognize the morals and love of people on the planet. Clayton is only considering entertaining himself by causing war and destruction. Because he likes it very much, Creighton can easily recognize his previous violence. Creighton believes that people on the planet like violence. Cretton does not understand morality and emotion. Because he did not know, Clayton did not do the right thing. He thinks that human beings are like war, so thinking this is correct and accompanied it.
When the asteroid is far from the sun, he thinks that the sun looks like a small, bright point far away; perhaps it will be smaller than the earth. On the dark side of the planet, the side opposite the sun drops a long, thin shadow. He thought that the negative emotion seen by others was not even aware that it was only his own shadow. He continued walking along the bluff, his feet rolled in the turf like a cold sponge. Before entering the ocean, he was approaching a river that spread and spread in the valley.