The man decides to close his eyes in preparation for death. It is rigged to fall when the weight is removed. The man is standing on a plank held up by the weight of the sergeant. The narrator describes him as having “a kindly expression which one would hardly have expected in one whose neck was in the hemp” (6). He is good-looking and from his dress seems to be a planter. The reader learns that the man being hanged is about 35 and a civilian. No one is moving except the men on the bridge. Other soldiers watch the hanging from a hillside leading to the river below. At the ends of the bridge are soldiers assigned to prevent anyone from crossing. Standing behind him, the narrator says, are “his executioners-two private soldiers of the Federal army” and their commander (4). Part 1 begins with an unnamed man about to be hanged from a railroad bridge, which readers later learn is the Owl Creek Bridge in northern Alabama. For a moment in Part 3, however, Bierce switches to present tense. “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” is written in three parts in the third-person past tense. The story is in the public domain and can also be accessed online for free. This study guide cites the edition of the story found in the 2009 e-book The Floating Press.
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