Friday, January 17, 2020
Suicide in the Trenches Analysis
Suicide in the Trenches ââ¬â an analysis What is the meaning of war? What is war like? How do soldiers feel in a war? Glorious? Depressed? This poem accurately shows the harsh but sadly true reality of war ââ¬â death, suicide and depression. Indeed, as quoted by Sir Williams Henry ââ¬â ââ¬Å"Nobody in his right mind would enjoy warâ⬠. The point of view is third person. This is effective in showing one case of suicide, in third person observation, representing the depression and desire to quickly die in everyone else. Life is really worse than death ââ¬â and this is shown through the eye-catching title ââ¬Å"Suicide in the Trenchesâ⬠.The word ââ¬Å"trenchesâ⬠further emphasized that not only is this depression possessed by one young soldier boy, but also by many others in war. The setting is in depressing, smelly, and stuffy trenches as the title has blatantly stated. The story is about a young soldier boyââ¬â¢s transformation from a happy and inno cent person into a depressed soldier who desires to kill himself, because life is really worse than death. The poet deliberately uses the small boy as an example to gain the readerââ¬â¢s sympathy. The structure of the poem is three stanzas with four lines in each. The rhyme scheme is A-A-B-B in each stanza.This seems to be a rigid structure, but it really does bring out how oneââ¬â¢s initial carefree innocence and freedom is being lost once he enters the cruel and depressing battlefield, or in this case, trenches. The tone in the poem is obviously a bitter and sarcastic one as we can see from the last stanza ââ¬â ââ¬Å"You smug-faced crowds with kindling eyeâ⬠¦ â⬠. Sassoon strongly feels the general public is unable to empathize with soldiers because there is no way to understand what war is like. Through this bitter and sad poem, the poet tries to bring out the theme of the poem ââ¬â nobody can understand what war is like without personal experience.The lang uage the poet uses is clever in conveying the theme ââ¬â a balance of symbolism, diction and alliteration is put to effective use in this poem. Something we cannot miss is the alliteration in the first stanza ââ¬Å"slept soundlyâ⬠. The repetition of the letter ââ¬Ësââ¬â¢ produces a harsh hissing sound, and this contributes to the bitter tone throughout the poem. Also, it puts emphasis on the phrase ââ¬Å"slept soundlyâ⬠. As we all know, people who can sleep soundly are those who have no worries and nagging troubles before going to bed. This highlights how the boy was so innocent, without any worries at all, at the start of his xperience in war. This is also brought out in ââ¬Å"whistlingâ⬠, an action done only when one is happy and carefree. The trenches symbolize the rotting function of war in the case of the poem. Throughout the year till winter, the trenches had apparently transformed a carefree, innocent and happy boy into a depressed, boy who ââ¬Å" put a bullet through his brainâ⬠. The alliteration of the letter ââ¬Ëbââ¬â¢ here also further creates a harsh, brute and bitter sound that adds on to the bitter mood, especially at the climax of the story told ââ¬â the suicide.The clever rhyme of ââ¬Å"brainâ⬠with ââ¬Å"againâ⬠at line 8 tries to strike a connection that although a young innocent boy was dragged into war and fought violently for his country and himself, in the end, when he is being pushed to his limit, still ââ¬Å"nobody spoke of him againâ⬠. This shows how cruel and selfish war is. It forces you to help ââ¬â at such a young age ââ¬â but yet does not remember or appreciate what you have done and sacrificed. In this case, the boy sacrificed his childhood fun, laughter, innocence and carefree life in return for nothing at all ââ¬â not even a memory of him.How is war cruel? This is the perfect example. The diction used in the poem is especially strong. In the last stanza, t he word ââ¬Å"kindlingâ⬠is being used to describe the ââ¬Å"eye(s)â⬠of the ââ¬Å"smug-faced crowdâ⬠. One must notice that this line is only devoted to facial description, and the ââ¬Å"kindlingâ⬠seems to be also a superficial countenance feature only. However, Siegfried tries to show with a sarcastic tone that they think that war is a glorious thing, they feel proud of these children, and seem to understand and appreciate what they are doing.But in reality, they can never imagine what these children are going through, and in reality, they donââ¬â¢t care or feel appreciative of what the children did. Therefore, the word kindling reveals the hypocrisy behind people who support war. In my personal opinion, the last stanza is the strongest and most impactful stanza. While the previous two stanza show the transformation of a single boy when he enters war, the last stanza directly attacks people who support war itself, at the thought of its glory and honor, b ut not give a thought about the ââ¬Å"pawnsâ⬠dying and suffering in war. Sneak home and pray youââ¬â¢ll never knowâ⬠shows that while the hypocrites support war, under the glorious facade, they are not willing or are too afraid to think of the consequences, sacrifice and price of this meaningless war ââ¬â a big price that separates thousands of families and destroy tens of thousands of children. The poet is just trying to use an extreme and most serious example to illustrate his point. Indeed, war is just so cruel ââ¬â it takes away, but does not return ââ¬â not even a single memory for dead people.It totally transform people from their happy and carefree state, into murderers constantly depressed and worried for their lives, yet guilty they killed their own kind. In war where humans are just pawns for a game of chess, nobody will understand how a soldier feels ââ¬â constantly killing his own kind to defend himself, lacking in sleep, separated, maybe f orever, from their families and friends ââ¬â unless they undergo war itself. I would like to end off with this quote from the U. S. Military force ââ¬â ââ¬Å"Nobody would understand a soldier, except for the soldier himselfâ⬠.Contrastingly the Second Stanza curtails the mood of happiness and innocence, abruptly introducing the horrors of war, using descriptive language such as describing the trenches to be, ââ¬Å"Winter trenches. â⬠It is Sassoon's Juxtaposition in the swing of mood and ultimately the contrast between the characters love of life to his sudden hatred of life, resulting in suicideâ⬠¦ ââ¬Å"He put a bullet through his brainâ⬠that shows the audience both the thematic idea and Sassoon's criticism of War's destruction of Innocence.
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