The Battle
By: Bred • Essay • 313 Words • March 25, 2010 • 829 Views
The Battle
In the poem "The battle", the speaker describes his experience in a battle in World War II. As the speaker give details on his experiences, he also explains the dehumanizing effects of war on humans and the transition from a human to a machine through metaphors and figurative language.
The poem starts with the speaker and his company walking through a forest. As they are walking they hear sounds of a near by fight. "Some where up ahead the guns thudded." During the walk, a red sun raises and the night is illumined with a red glow and the speaker gives the sun a metaphor to a cut throat in the battle that is near his location and the death of the people during that battle. "Like the circle of a throat the night on every side was turning red."
The speaker and his company stops and starts to build fox holes in their current positions. "They halted and they dug." When they are done digging they just stood in their foxholes and began to freeze and their humanity starting to fade.
At dawn a series of bombings started. Shootings began and