Preview

Soldiers Home

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1248 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Soldiers Home
In Soldier's Home, Ernest Hemingway depicts Harold Krebs return home from World War I and the problems he faces when dealing with his homecoming and transition back towards a normal life. After the fighting overseas commenced, it took Krebs a year to finally leave Europe and return to his family in Oklahoma. Once home, he found it hard to talk about all he had seen in his tour of duty overseas, which should be attributed to the fact that he saw action in some of the bloodiest, most crucial battles towards the culmination of the war. Therefore, Krebs difficulty in acknowledging his past is because he was indeed a "good soldier" (139), whose efforts in order to survive "The Great War," were not recognized by his country, town and even worse, his own family.
After his late return from the war, Krebs moved back to the home of his family in Oklahoma. Although this seems common to what most soldiers would do after war, Krebs stay away from his family had been an elongated one. This is not just because of his leisure time at the Rhine with German prostitutes after the war had ended, but also because he went to the war direct from a "Methodist College in Kansas" (136). With that information, we can deduce that Krebs had not lived with his family for more than two years, but most likely between four and six. This must have put a serious strain on his relationship with his family members, who in his own mind, obviously lived in a different world than he did. Before the war, his father did not even trust him with responsibility of taking out the family car. Now, on his return, his "father was noncommittal" and basically absent from his life, not to mention he is never actually present at any time in the story. The only time Krebs father is brought up in conversation, is by Krebs mother when she tells him that they both had discussed Krebs being able to take out the family car. Even when his mother reveals that it had been his father's idea, Krebs replied "I'll

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Ernest Hemingway’s short story Soldier’s Home is about a young man named Harold Krebs who has just come back from the war. Throughout the story Krebs deals with many struggles within himself. He no longer has the effort to have a relationship with any of the girls in his hometown. Since he arrived much later than most of the soldiers, all the stories he wants to discuss are nothing but dull to everyone. His experience in the war changed Krebs and he doesn’t seem to acknowledge it. Deeper into the story, Krebs father makes it clear that no one can drive the family car. As the story continues, Krebs father later discusses that Kreb is allowed to use it since his return from the war. This particular scene was very important because it showed the extent of change Kreb was in. Due to all the change Kreb faced after the war, Kreb’s views of life changed completely, which…

    • 622 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Harold Krebs is a United States marine that fought in World War I. When he comes back home from the war, he personally discovers how much he has changed after the many years he has been away from home. "He is home, but it is no soldier’s home to which he has returned" (Soldier's Home). For instance, Krebs returns home a lot later than everyone else from the military, so he does not experience a warm welcoming from the townspeople which makes him feel as if nothing has changed within his hometown. At first, he does not readjust and remains an empty shell of a man, but towards the end of the story, Krebs decides to find a job and to go watch his little sister's game, which could possibly lead to another journey of a greater…

    • 665 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    To build a relationship, one must talk and interact. Krebs feels like women and relationships are “too complicated,” and he does not want to “have to work” to get a girl (Hemingway 71). Since building a relationship will require discussing the truth about the war and his experiences, Krebs refuses to build relationships, and that forces him to become an outsider. His main focus is that “he [doesn’t] want to tell any more lies” (Hemingway 71). To Krebs, women represent growing up because that would force Krebs to be a man and risk being rejected because of the truth. Lying is complicated and child-like just as women are complicated. Life is much simpler as a child. To build a relationship would mean that Krebs has to become a man. Part of being a man involves sharing his experiences of war and that is complicated as well. By ignoring women and refusing to build relationships, he can remain as a child and not have…

    • 3753 Words
    • 16 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the beginning of the short story “Soldier Home,” by Ernest Hemingway, the main character, Harold Krebs is introduced as a young, religious, college frat boy who joins the Army along with some of his fellow peers. He spent 2 years in the Rhine and even took a photo with 2 unattractive German Ladies. When Krebs returns home to an almost unnatural world he feels unfit and unwelcome due to the lack of compassion and notoriety from his home town of Oklahoma. Hemingway says, this may be due to Krebs returning home “much too late” (187). “People seemed to think it was rather ridiculous for Krebs to be getting back so late, years after the war was over” (187). In my opinion, any normal person that experiences this lack of compassion and understanding for the sacrifices they made in war would feel a sense of rejection by the people. This type of rejection would cause any normal person to fall into a state of depression.…

    • 793 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The stories are alike more than different because they both involve young men going to war and having to face the atrocities war. In "Soldier's Home", Krebs lies and embellishes so much that after his return home it makes him sick to lie. This theme is backed up by O'Brian's story when he says that in order to make a war story believable to the general population, one must lie and stretch the truth. Krebs often tells his war stories with the other old veterans at the poolroom. O'Brian also likes to tell others about his experiences so they can get a better idea of what war is really like. Hemingway tells the reader in his story that people did not want to hear the stories Krebs had to tell; while O'Brian states that war stories are about people who never listen. One recurring idea in both stories is the fact that soldiers want to do what they like and nothing else. This is portrayed in "Soldier's Home" through Krebs who does nothing but pleasurable things throughout his entire day with no regard to getting a job or making money. In "How to Tell a True War Story", O'Brian states that while lying in a fox hole in a battle zone, a soldier will "ache for a perfect world, the way things could be" (pg.481). When Krebs returns home he is very blunt and truthful about answers he gives with no regard to how…

    • 740 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ernest Hemingway’s “Soldier’s Home” is a tremendous story about a young soldier’s battle to find himself after returning from the war. In this story, Hemingway’s character Krebs leaves for the war as a young upscale college student and returns a couple of years later out of touch with society and lost within himself. The main conflict in the story is the struggle in which Krebs faces as he tries to rediscover where he belongs not only in the world, but also inside himself.…

    • 832 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Tension In Soldier's Home

    • 343 Words
    • 2 Pages

    the short story “Soldier’s Home” by Ernest Hemingway the character Krebs has enlisted in the…

    • 343 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    soldiers

    • 483 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Edmonds was born as Sarah Emma Evelyn Edmonds in New Brunswick, Canada, in December of 1841. There were not many opportunities for a young woman to support herself, consequently Edmonds dressed as a man and took the name of Franklin Thompson. With her new identity, she sold Bibles in Canada and eventually went across the border where she continued to sell Bibles in Flint, Michigan as Thompson. The Civil War broke out while Edmonds was living in Flint.…

    • 483 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Bringing the War Home

    • 6657 Words
    • 27 Pages

    In the military men and women (but for the purposes of this paper I will be referring mostly to men for the majority of our people in the armed forces are males) are trained to kill or be killed. They are trained with this knowledge to use on the battlefield. What researchers are finding more and more are soldiers are bringing these skills home. Along with a mixture of mental illnesses that are going untreated and undiagnosed or misdiagnosed. So why is that men who are willing to lay down their lives for complete strangers are going home to hurt the ones they love the most? And why is that in our society that asks “why women just don’t leave” even more so military wives are taught that’s it’s even more honorable to stay. When in fact there is nothing honorable, loving, or patriotic about taking a beating at the hands of your husband. Who swore an oath to serve and protect this country and to honor and cherish you. We have a duty as a nation to support our troops and to help them but are we neglecting their families?…

    • 6657 Words
    • 27 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Military Families

    • 362 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Frank Schaeffer used rhetorical appeal in “Military Families” to have his audience believe it’s wrong to have the upper class and leaders of America make decisions on war and not be a part of it. Frank uses anecdotes and rhetorical questions in the form of ethos, so that people understand what it’s is like to be a working class citizen and have to worry about their family members in war.…

    • 362 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Krebs has a different aspect on how he views the world and cannot control of what he says. He does not want to lose anyone he loves. When his mother asked him “Don’t you love you mother, dear boy” (Hemingway 138)? His reply was “No” Krebs said” (Hemingway 138). Harold Krebs was just thinking out loud. He knew what he had said to his mother was wrong, but he could not fix what he told her. Krebs was also reminded by his mother that “I held you next to my heart when you were a tiny baby” (Hemingway 138). She wanted Krebs to feel how much her love was for him and that he should still love his mother even through all the conflicts that he was involved in at the war. After apologizing to his mother for what he had said “He had felt sorry for his mother and she had made him lie” (Hemingway 138). Harold Krebs seems to be that he could not explain that he did not want to lose his mother. He wanted her to keep distant from his life, but not to distant where he would lose his mother love, or trust. It also shows that his love had been turned upside down by his traumatic experience from the war and that he did not have that emotional balance right…

    • 424 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Veterans Day

    • 63 Words
    • 1 Page

    American citizens that have come back from the Army, Air Force, Marine Corps, or Coast Guard are known as Veterans. Throughout the years, thousands of troops have come back being known as heroes and were rewarded a day in which they have served our country. This day has a name that goes by Veterans Day and is placed on the 11th of November.…

    • 63 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Wounded Veterans

    • 1614 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Lin, Dr. (2012, September 18). Interview by J Westrich [Personal Interview]. Military veterans facing ptsd and tbi.…

    • 1614 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Wounded War Veterans

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The Iraq war has ended as of December 2011. Osama Bin Laden has been killed as of May 2011 and yet the war in Afghanistan is still ongoing. The jihadist terrorism threat that our nation once feared from Al-Qaeda has diminished. Many question the justification of the United State’s involvement in the Middle East over the past decade. What have our intentions been this whole time and have the lives of those brave military men and women lost been worth the fight?…

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Casualties of war continue to happen long after the individuals time in combat has come to an end. To the public’s eye, veterans returning home must be overwhelmed with joy to be out of danger and put back into the world they once knew. But are they? Veterans returning home from combat experience are faced with the difficult task of coping with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and its side effects, because of their experiences in combat. In Lousie Erdrich’s, “The Red Convertible” and Wilfred Owen’s, “Dulce et Decorum Est” we can see how and why a returning veteran, such as Henry, would have trouble readapting to his former environment and handling the symptoms of PTSD.…

    • 1995 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays