Comparing A Farewell To Arms And The First Long Range Artillery Fire On Leningrad

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In Ernest Hemingway’s novel A Farewell to Arms, there is a constant motion of urgency that sweeps along the war and the short-lived love that Lieutenant Henry and Catherine share. Hemingway makes a motif out of the juxtaposition of peace and destruction. He uses this technique to show the reader that violence and war are fast-paced, unexpected, and will eradicate the livelihood of both soldiers and civilians. The novel shares the motifs of inescapable rain, the wrath, and suddenness of war, and the faux visage of safety with Anna Akhmatova’s poem The First Long Range Artillery Fire on Leningrad. Akhmatova is written in the perspective of a mother who realizes the sudden change among her city due to the war is likened to the suddenness of the death of her child. Both works of literature shed a negative light on war by utilizing diction and imagery through an ordinary characters’ point of view. …show more content…

However, the title The First Long Range Artillery Fire on Leningrad explicitly tells the reader that the poem is about war; or more specifically an arms attack. “A multi-colored crowd streaked about and suddenly all was totally changed” (1-2). The multi-colored crowd draws the imagery of soldiers dressed in several different uniforms lined up on the Warfield.
This connects directly to the scene in chapter 30 of Farewell To Arms where Lieutenant Henry realizes that he is “just another German in an Italian’s uniform” (224). In the war, the men just become a collage of different colored uniforms and just like the city becomes “a strange land”. Akhmatova uses diction such as “suddenly” and “strange” to show that the war can change a homeland into an unfamiliar city. In A Farewell To Arms, a military conspiracy can turn compatriot into an enemy dressed in a

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