Based on Orwell's experience with the Indian Imperial Police (1922-1927), "Shooting an Elephant" is set in Moulmein, in Lower Burma. Orwell, the narrator, has already begun to question the presence of the British in the Far East. He says that, theoretically and secretly, he was "all for the Burmese and all against their oppressors, the British. Orwell describes himself as "young and ill-educated, bitterly hating his job. Orwell's job, in this instance, is to respond to a report of the death of a local man who was killed by an elephant in musth. Orwell finds the man "lying on his belly with arms crucified and head sharply twisted to the side. The corpse grins with "an expression of unendurable agony. At this point, Orwell feels the collective will of the crowd urging him to shoot the elephant, but Orwell, knowing that the elephant is probably no longer dangerous, has no intention of shooting the elephant. He begins to anthropomorphize the elephant, changing the pronouns from "it to "he, referring to the elephant's "preoccupied grandmotherly air, and concluding that "it would be murder to shoot the elephant. Despite Orwell's aversion to shooting the elephant, he becomes suddenly aware that he will lose face and be humiliated if he does not shoot it. He therefore shoots the elephant. The death itself is sustained in excruciating detail. After three shots, the elephant still does not die. Orwell fires his two remaining shots into the elephant's heart. He sends someone to get his small rifle, then pours "shot after shot into his heart and down his throat. Still, the elephant does not die. Orwell, unable to stand the elephant's suffering and unable to watch and listen to it, goes away. The elephant, like the Burmese people, has become the unwitting victim of the British imperialist's need to save face. No one is stronger for the experience. Orwell candidly depicts his unsympathetic actions both in shooting the el