To Kill A Mockingbird Essay On The Topic The Quietest People Are Often The Most Powerful
Wednesday, October 2, 2019
The Cause of Death in All Quiet on the Western Front :: All Quiet on the Western Front Essays
      The Cause of Death in All Quiet on the Western Front                 Erich Maria Remarque's ALL QUIET ON THE  WESTERN FRONT is a very     interesting and true-to-heart novel based in the first world war where     many men and women died because someone called them the enemy.  The  main     character is Paul Baumer, a nineteen year old man who is swept into the     war, along with his friends, not one day before he is out of school.   They     are sent to the front to "protect the fatherland" or Germany as it is     called.  Paul and his friends go from this idealistic opinion to     disillusionment throughout the book as they discover the truth that the     enemy is just like them, and Paul's friends start being killed  one-by-one.     This novel is a gripping account of how war is most of the time bloody  and     horrid.  The few who came out of this war were not the people they  were     when they left.  They become pale and emotionless, without feeling  or     thought.  Some killed themselves, they had experienced ultimate  horror,     the horror of war.  The novel starts two years after Paul and his  friends     first reached the front and then goes back and forth between present and     past.  The main topics throughout the book is the change from idealism  to     disillusionment, the loss of Paul's friends, and especially the loss of     Paul's innocence.                   The change from idealism to  disillusionment is really the driving     force behind the novel.  From young school boys,  listening to  their     schoolmaster asking "Won't you join up comrades?"(11) to "weary,     broken"(294) men, idealism and disillusionment play a major role on  Paul's     decisions and thoughts.  For example, on the second page of the  novel,     Paul says, "It would not be such a bad war if only one could get a little     more sleep." (2)  Later in the book, a disillusioned Paul says of the  same     war, "I see how people are set against one another and in silence,     unknowingly, foolishly, obediently, innocently slay one another."(263)     Even though he has been in the war two years, the first quote shows how     Paul's idealism is still strong.  In the second quote, Paul sees the  war     for what it truly is, a waste of time, food, money, and young men.   The     					    
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