Charley wanted to become a man so badly and so quickly, that he was blindsided by the factors of what it would really be like, living life in the army. Charley was 15 years old entering the war.But he knew they wouldn’t take him if he was underaged, so he lied about his age just to be in the army. So he gets there, and he doesn't receive a uniform just yet, which he thought he would. And he writes letters to his mother telling what it is like, being a soldier. In one, he says the food is so gross. The beef, so gamey the dogs won’t eat it, and the beans, they were hard.And, they would keep reusing the beans like, for soup and coffee. Charley finally got sick to death of the drilling and wheeling and marching and fake loading. As weeks and weeks …show more content…
He wanted to run away so badly, but thought nobody else had and so he couldn't. He just knew he was going to die, in the next battle or the next, he just knew it. In the next battle, he felt the rage of killing them...ALL of them. He was so angry, and he wanted nothing more to see all of them dead. Charley had another mate, Nelson, his first battle, and he gets a shot to the belly, and the ambulance doesn't pick up belly-injured soldiers because there wasn't really much they could do for them. Later on Charley was on watch, and a Rebel was talking to him, they traded then that night, and then the Rebel got screamed at for talking with the enemy. The next night, he wasn't there. It was a different soldier because, when Charley tried to start a conversation, the other soldier shot at him, but he missed. After that, it was winter time, and Charley was feeling really alone, and then the sick had to have meat so Charley had to kill a horse for them. And Charley so wasnt down with that, but he had to. So he did, and that day was a terrible day for him.
Charley a minnesota farm boy was in war. There was a point in the war when everyone thought charley was shot but in fact he was not shot it was the rebels blood all over him. The people he was with was out numbered by rebel soldiers but charley did not give up he just got ready and killed a bunch of rebel soldiers and got blood all over him.
The American Revolution marked the history of many heroic events that immaculately stand as true inspirations for the generations to come in the United States. Even today, the gallantry of a few soldiers that won independence for the country is not only kept in the hearts of the people but run in the American blood to demonstrate acts of valor at times of war and hardships. One such story recorded in the history dates back to 1776, about a sixteen-year old juvenile, Joseph Plumb Martin, joined the Rebel Infantry and recorded his tribulations about forty-seven years in a memoir titled as “A Narrative of a Revolutionary Soldier”. The book mainly focuses on the sufferings through the tough situation he went through.
When Charley joined the First Minnesota Volunteers he along with many others wanted to help support his country during war. Everyone from the Union and the Confederacy thought that the war would be over soon but sadly they were wrong. The war that Charley had just joined would be bloodiest American war yet. Charley found out in this book that war changes people and that it is often not what people make it out to be.
In the book, the soldiers ate barely any meat, biscuits, and always had permission to drink coffee no matter where it was or what it was in. In the real war, the soldiers stood on a persistent diet which was hardtack and coffee. Hardtack is a biscuit that was very inexpensive to have since it was made of water and flour.
In the book The Final Hour by Andrew Klavan, the main character, Charlie West, changed as a person due to their experiences fighting the Homelanders. Before starting the fight against the Homelanders, and he was still in jail for a murder he didn’t commit Charlie was very different, and more beaten down than he is by the end of the book. First of all, on page 4, Charlie says, “I felt a black despair surrounding me, closing in on me.” What this means is that Charlie is now scared, because he knows there are people in the prison that want to kill him, and the “black despair” was supposed to represent his coming death.
In the civil war novel Soldier’s Heart by Gary Paulsen, within pages 52- 57, Nelson, a fellow soldier was wounded in the stomach. This made it difficult for him to fight or even breathe. Stomach wounds were known as untreatable injuries meaning that when a soldier got one they were practically left to die. When soldiers were super injured like in this situation and didn’t have enough strength to keep fighting, they had to be left on their own to die.
In the The Things They Carried, the emotions are more than just a mental problem, they become life changing conflicts. The author of this book is Tim O’Brien. Tim O’Brien is the main character throughout the whole book. In the beginning of the book, The Things They Carried, Tim O’Brien goes in depth describing what each of the men carried with them. He started with actual things having to deal with war, then talking about the emotional burdens the men carried.
Charley and Henry had to kill people in hand to hand combat, so these soldiers have gone through a lot in the war. The main characters in this book were both young, Henry was the legal age of 18 but he was still young, and Charley was only 16 when he signed up. The hardships of the war and all the kill caused both characters to go insane from the killing. the soldiers were in the same war, the Civil War, but fought in different battles. Overall the soldiers were required to go through tight and nervous experiences while in
Hello I am Jordy. I am fourteen years old. I came to Taiwan when I was eleven. Before that I studied in an American school in Shanghai. That was my first time studying in a Taiwanese local school.
This chapter “The Ghost Soldiers”, showed us how Tim O’Brien and the other soldiers were dealing with the war both physically and psychologically. It also shows us how the Tim O'Brien behaved and felt when he was shot, wounded and had a bacteria infection on his butt and how the war changed the way he thought, and viewed the other soldiers around him. This chapter also contain a lot of psychological lens. From the way Tim O’Brien felt when he was shot and separated from his unit to a new unit to when he wanted revenge on Bobby Jorgenson for almost “killing” him.
The person had to deal with death and the reality of war under the worst case scenario. Bob “Rat” Kiley was that soldier and one of the many soldiers that left something in the war. He had lost his friend Curt Lemon and that’s the first sign that the war has been turning to be painful for him. This coping mechanism for the death was to write letters to lemon’s sister and he shot a baby Water Buffalo. This coping mechanism is seen in the chapter “How to tell a true war story”, shows how he has been affected and explained the toll the war had taken on him.
At Valley Forge I can smell the stench of the nasty cooking and hear the angry soldiers crying out that there is more meat. Members of the Congress didn’t trust in General Washington. There is a soldier that has worn out shoes, his legs are bare and half naked. Soldiers were healthy but started to grow sick. Deciding not to re-enlist is a choice I made because of the lack of trust, living conditions, illness at Valley Forge.
The True Weight of War “The Things They Carried,” by Tim O’Brien, brings to light the psychological impact of what soldiers go through during times of war. We learn that the effects of traumatic events weigh heavier on the minds of men than all of the provisions and equipment they shouldered. Wartime truly tests the human body and and mind, to the point where some men return home completely destroyed. Some soldiers have been driven to the point of mentally altering reality in order to survive day to day. An indefinite number of men became numb to the deaths of their comrades, and yet secretly desired to die and bring a conclusion to their misery.
Consequently, he was involved in a car accident and fleed to his old hometown, where he met his ‘dead’ mother for one more day. Little did he realize he was trapped in a realm of the dead, where most of the deceased and the near-death gathered before being sent to another place. During his meeting with his mother, he faced tons of revelations of his sacred past and learnt from the things he could not perceive by his own. In this moment, Charley was able to change from the negligence, the guilt, the
Without ever uttering a single word, Charley Edwards possibly had the greatest positive and negative effect on Paul in the story Paul’s Case. Charley Edwards is a teen performer at the local theater, and Paul’s love interest. In one paragraph, Charley made Paul the happiest boy in the world; but in the next Paul became even more alone than he had ever been. How can the man, who never verbalizes a word, have such a profound and life altering impact on Paul?