The countless warfares the human race has endured. The naive young men marching off to war. The distraught mother's cries. The grieving families mourning the loss of a life that to them was an individual that they viewed meaningful. War sees no individuals. War doesn't see their many personalities nor the distinct traits they each have. War only sees soldiers, pawns in its endless game. Casualties and fatalities are just viewed as inconveniences. There is little or no compassion as men are left to die drowning in a pool of their own blood. The fallen soldier is tossed away like the broken toy of a child. All this is in the name of warfare or as the few survivors call it hell. Because for a survivor that is exactly what they have endured. Their
Fallen Angels “I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, only as one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity” (Dwight D. Eisenhower). Throughout all of history war has surrounded human existence. From the Spartans in Rome to Infantry Marines patrolling the streets in Afghanistan, the presence of war has affected generations since the beginning of time. In the book, Fallen Angels, the author, Walter Dean Myers portrays how the harsh realities of war have a substantial impact on soldiers and their experiences by displaying the internal transformations, the power of fear, the permanent psychological damages, and the cruelty of the environment through a classic Vietnam War story. One of the most prevalent impacts war
Soldiers, especially, witness death more than the average person. As a result, soldiers go “crazy” and start to act differently after witnessing all the violence and death of war. Soldiers have to endure the loss of loved ones
Slopes of War Literary Analysis “Listen and watch the world around you. Try to understand why things happen. Don’t be satisfied with answers others give you… work to get answers on your own. Understand why you believe things.” –Avi Slopes of War, a novel by N.A. Perez, is a complex tale of war, heartbreak, and passion based on the Civil War, and more specifically, the bloody Battles of Gettysburg.
In Gary Paulsen’s novel, Soldier’s Heart we meet Charley Goddard. Charley was fourteen when he entered the war. The next year he had turned fifteen years old. I am 12 years and I am 5’6. I am from Jonesboro, Ar and Charley is from Winona, Minnesota.
I believe that war can turn a boy into a man. Make a boy become an adult. War is something that is tragic but also can be rewarding. You have to make choices out on the battlefield in a matter of seconds. Some of the choices could affect many people and not just yourself.
The inability to communicate their losses and their pain is not only shown in violence, but a disconnect to their loved ones after coming home. After returning from the war, “they lost sight of how different the Iraq war was in Iraq than it was in the United States. To them, it was about specific acts of bravery and tragedy. The firefight in Fedaliyah--- That was war.
War is nasty; war is fun. War is thrilling; war is drudgery. War makes you a man; war makes you dead." (pg. 80). The effect of war on each soldier who fought in it was different and unique, and as a result, each soldier's experience with war has a different effect.
Each soldier sees that their fight is the most important fight, but really in the eyes of time war is redundant. Vonnegut crushes the idea that every soldier 's’ actions will last the course of time by using the phrase “So it goes”(pgs.36,58,61). The phrase is used almost one hundred times in order to give the impression that most of war does not contribute anything new or helpful to humanity. Soldiers grow up with dreams that they will go on marvellous adventures or slay the wicked in order to be remembered, yet this is true for some not all. The Glory and romance of war are searched out by many, but many will be forgotten or die
War and its affinities have various emotional effects on different individuals, whether facing adversity within the war or when experiencing the psychological aftermath. Some people cave under the pressure when put in a situation where there is minimal hope or optimism. Two characters that experience
“Combat stirs up a whirlwind of conflicting emotions. Feelings of exhilaration, love, hatred, guilt rage, helplessness, disgust and fear” (Haunted- America in WWII magazine). For an example, if a loved one happened to die in front of you imagine all the emotions running through
In the short story The Sniper by Liam O’Flaherty, a main theme is that war is cruel. This is supported by many details within the story. War makes people do things that they normally wouldn’t do, mostly because it is their duty to protect what they believe in or their country. For example, the
The war destroyed a family “It can take years to mold a dream. It takes only a fraction of a second for it to be shattered”. (Mary E. Pearson). Any war has horrible impacts in the lives of people who are especially involved. It destroys not only a family life but also national and international economy beside the safety of a whole country.
The song reflects the feelings of what a soldier is feeling upon discovering he will need leave where he lives to take on a journey to the sea. He leaves behind his parents, friends as well as leaving behind a girlfriend. This song has become so important to the people of Nova Scotia so much that they named it their official song. It is based off of the poem “The Soldier Adieu” by Robert Tannahill. The song is said to be made around the time of World War 1 or slightly before.
War is portrayed as a drug that makes theses soldiers do anything to protect the people.
The war is like a cancer, spreading a lot of death. But according longtime Scientific American writer John Horgan (2014) the `war and cancer differ in at least one crucial way: whereas cancer is a stubborn aspect of nature, war is our creation`. As long as there is more than one person, there is more than one opinion and a different understanding of how things should go. It is just of matter of time when the disagreement and conflict may break out. When we look back to the history, for example last four centuries every age has had its own big war, beginning with 17th century and Thirty years’ war and ending with 20th century and WW I and WW II.