The short story “Soldier’s Home” made me think about all the soldiers who miss home or have no family to recognize them in their glory in which what they’re doing for our nation. This shows how all of the men and women miss
One of Toomer’s most famous poems People evaluates our focus on appearances . Toomer starts the poem “to those who are fixed on white, white is white, to those fixed on black, black is black, and red is red and yellow, yellow" (line 2-6). Toomer continues to expand on this idea by explaining that people who see the world this way “never see themselves or you, or me” (line 11-12). This frankly expresses the social attitude towards Blacks at this time, as just being their skin and appearance or “other people”.
The author uses clever writing to show the sacrifice in this quote, "While they continued to write and talk, we saw the wounded and dying. While they taught that duty to one's country is the
Most people consider it an honour to be given the opportunity to fight for one’s country but in Tim’s case it is the opposite. He sees it as himself becoming “a coward” (187) by conforming to other’s expectations instead of fighting for his individual beliefs and “for more than twenty years [he’s] had to live with it” (172). The thought of throwing every one of his beliefs away and taking lives just to fit in is extremely degrading for him and makes him feel like the opposite of the hero he dreamed to be as a child. But it is this event that shows him what perseverance really is. Tim survives the war which itself is no easy task, but additionally he has to live with the feeling of betraying himself in the process.
This metaphor displays his uncertainty as per his crucial part in that moment in time. The soldier pictures himself as the hand on a clock, subject to the inevitable force of a clockwork motor that cannot be slowed or quickend. He realises that he does not really know why he is running and feels “statuary in mid-stride”. However, towards the end of the poem, all moral justifications for the existence of war have become meaningless- “King, honour, human dignity, etcetera Dropped like luxuries in a yelling alarm”, which is extremely dismissive of all the motives people provide for joining the army, explicitly stating that those motives do not justify and do not withstand the war. Disorientation is also highlighted in the line “Stumbling across a field of clods towards a green hedge That dazzled with rifle fire” where the confusion between the natural world and man-made world is expressed.
The lives of soldiers, Norman Bowker and Curt Lemon, illustrate how the war pressures the human spirit to a standard it can’t resemble. The pressure and responsibilities of lost friends and lost acts of courage heavily weigh Norman Bowker down,
The author expresses mild courage in the American soldiers who ought to be stronger and
Paul Revere is one of the reasons we are free Americans. His plan worked, as well as he thought. This lead to nation changing history. This help U.S.A win our first battles in American Revolution War. In this poem are lots of images people have never heard of.
In the poem, “What Every Soldier Should Know”, Brian Turner, details the ever-present threat of death in a war zone. This poem expesses not only the terror of the American soldiers, but also exemplifies the emotions that the Middle Eastern soldiers feel towards the American soldiers. The soldiers are experiencing death, chaos, and disorder, but for some of the middle eastern people, they experience that every day. A lot of Middle Eastern people are normal people, defending their home land, their family, and their country.
The author compares the soldiers because he wants the readers
In other words, nothing can truly pay tribute to these men—like the inscriptions, the memory of them and their sacrifice is destined to fade over time. But the poem does more than just highlight the tragic loss of life in war. The poem describes the washed-up men as being strangely united in death: “Whether as enemies they fought / Or fought with us, or neither; the sand joins them together.” In death, the things that made these soldiers comrades or enemies wash away, and they all are once more part of the wider human family. Their anonymity has eroded their identity, but it has also eroded their wartime allegiances to one side or the other.
But glory has little to do with the harsh realities of war. Walt Whitman, the famed transcendentalist poet, understood the perils and horrors of war firsthand, as he was a male nurse who cared for wounded soldiers in Washington, D.C during the Civil War. This prompted him to suggest that “the real war will never go into the books.” It would seem that even an esteemed author of his caliber felt that war was impossible to capture honestly due to the textual mediums limitations as well as the unwillingness of writers and historians to properly document the plights of marginalized groups during the war.
The sentimental and romantic nature of Seeger's poems is a helpful reminder that we can't solve problems effectively unless we think that they are just and appropriate. The vast majority of military volunteers, like Seeger, don't enlist for no reason at all. Soldiers are motivated to fight by a variety of things, including patriotism, pride, bravery, and courage, all of which apply to Seeger's case. Even if disappointment eventually sets in, we shouldn't let it influence how we perceive combat in general. ("Dead on the 4th of July: Poet Alan Seeger.")
The poem itself begins on the water. Many soldiers are returning from the fearful Civil War. The soldiers fought long and hard for their side. Eventually,after four years, they had claimed victory. As they were returning to the land,the people could be heard cheering
(Phillips) What soldiers do for everyone is an act of love in itself, even if it may be for their own benefit; they are here for our country and saving others, willingly. In everyday life we see heroes, not just those in uniform, but the people who blend into the background. We see them all the time, but do not give them any thought, and we take them for granted more often than not. These heroes can be the ones who donate to charity around Christmas time so a child can eat. The people who go underground every day as a coal miner to keep everyone’s lights on, are heroes.