4. SUBJECT: This book is written by a German veteran of World War I, who describes the German soldiers' extreme physical and mental stress during the war, and the detachment from civilian life felt by many of these soldiers upon returning home from the frontlines.…
The nature of trench warfare and life in the trenches dealing with experiences of Allied and German soldiers…
The Nature of Trench Warfare and Life in the Trenches Dealing with Experiences of Allied and German Soldiers:…
The nature of trench warfare and life in the trenches dealing with experiences of both allied and German soldiers.…
Erich Maria Remarque’s book All Quiet on the Western Front explains the brutal and filthy life inside the trenches during the first world war. The story revolves around high school friends who through nationalism and propaganda are convinced to join the war effort. However they did not get the heroic lifestyle they were expecting. Instead they got years filled with death, despair, and fear as they continued to fight and attempt to stay alive. Readers will follow the story and learn the true horrors on the battlefield and how even in a state of hopelessness people will still be human.…
Here in the trenches condition are very terrible. Things I had seen is unbearable, these trenches are overflowed with water and things I have to do to live in these conditions. About the overflow as it rains, us standing in these large puddle. Your socks will be completely wet, which is a uncomfortable feeling. In order to survive I had to find a dead man socks to use for my own. We also went several weeks not showering because during these conditions they needed a excessive amount of soldier to fight. Having twenty guys crowded on top of you, these trenches are very narrow only enough to have bit of room for the person next to you. This made diseases to easily spread such as influenza, fever, typhoid, and malaria. One of my buddies I share a spot within the trenche just died, right in front of me.…
This war was to become known as the ‘trench war,’ as fighting on the ground consisted of soldiers in dugout mud trenches, heavy artillery barrages, and men charging into no-mans land, which was itself a desolate landscape between the trenches, scarred by combat, death and seemingly endless explosive craters. To this point, the aspect of predominant trench-warfare has been debated as prolonging the war, as well as being the root of the deadliest conflict in history to that end, and planting the roots for the Second World War to later transpire. Furthermore, the four-year Great War not only represents that of death and bloodshed of the…
Fatigue. Explosions. Blood. Guts. Death. These are only a few of the horrid images that the World War I soldiers endeavoured. Serving in war is not for the faint of heart or those considered not able to stomach the sight of gore and dead bodies every step. In the story, All Quiet on the Western Front written by Erich Maria Remarque, this story depicts these exact horrors during Remarque’s time spent on the German battlefront. Deaths are of the norm. Soldiers become immune to the smell of rotting bodies and bits and pieces of flesh everywhere. Although comradery is a positive aspect of war, corruption and lost youth outweigh comradeship, therefore making war a negative circumstance.…
Tim O’Brien’s, The Things They Carried, contained different memoirs that truly bring the actions of war to life for the reader. Obrien’s book expresses the real feelings a solider faces while getting ready to go into war, in war, and post war. Through his vivid descriptions the reader is able to emphasize with the emotional burdens and stresses solders must go through while on duty. We are able to observe the different coping mechanisms solders must endure, including, cutting them selves off from reality and preoccupying their mind with other, sometimes meaningless, thoughts .The chapter that had the largest impact on myself was “Night Life.” For me this passage truly depicted not just the physical, but mental battle soldiers must go through; and the extreme measures taken to relive themselves from the intensity of battle.…
Can any of us imagine what life for soldiers in the First World War was really like? All we have are pictures and books to help us imagine but none of us can really feel the pain they went through. Can you imagine the terrible conditions and revolting, slimy mud that was under their feet? The noise, the bullets, the flies, the corpses, the mud that acted like quick sand and drowned so many. Life in the trenches was an unimaginable test of strength and endurance. The trenches were often quiet terrible which led to many diseases such as trench foot, trench fever, frost bite, pneumonia, body lice and many other diseases which could kill many of the soldiers. As it rained the majority of the time, the trenches were filled with watery mud which was a danger of warfare; they could get trapped in a trench.…
Life in the trenches was extremely difficult for thousands of people in WWI. The living conditions were terrible which added to the difficulty of life of a soldier on the frontline during WWI. The trenches, along with the rest of the war, were filled with the fear of going head on into battle. Soldiers faced death along with infestation, incoming artillery and lack of supplies.…
Imagine yourself in a muddy trench, being about eight to ten feet deep down. There are enemies firing guns overhead up top of the trench flying over it and the stench in the trench is horrible. There are many bodies piled around that have died and sometimes giant rats would walk about. Disease runs rampant and many people die due to the hard conditions. That’s a small part of what it was probably like to be fighting in the trenches back in World War One.…
In this essay I will be discussing the different points that are pro and con to the statement that life in the trenches as hell on earth during the first world war, there are many points arguing both ways but I will be concentrating mostly on the main points. I will talk about the conditions of living, moral, sleeping to name just a few.…
I found “How to Tell a True War Story” the most interesting short story we have read so far. Why? Because the story is true and so very real. The story paints such a vivid picture of war and what effects it has on the many men involved. The people are real people, the events are real events, and the story is a real story. It really drives home the point because war is such a big part of life today in which it is always going on. War is part of our past, we are in a war right now, and I’m sure we will have war in the future. It is almost inevitable in ones lifetime to not witness a war which is another reason why it hits so…
Life in the trenches, during World War I, was a horrible experience for the soldiers of that time. Many soldiers were faced with death during these times. The sources of their deaths were either enemy attacks or their contraction of harmful diseases. Another major obstacle, in the trenches, was of the infestation of rats. Rats, either black or brown, were feared and were nuisances to the soldiers. Brown rats, especially, were detested due to their tendencies to feed on human remains, including the eyes and liver of a corpse. They reproduced at a rapid rate and were viewed in great distaste. A further nuisance was of lice. It was contagious and spread rapidly through the trenches. The cause for this was the filthy environment of the trenches.…