The God Who Shield Me Before But Watches Over Us All Analysis

884 Words2 Pages

For many service members being away from home for long periods can cause problems at home or work. Their war-zone experience and their combat stressors can increase their chances of having mental health problems. One study by Eric Dean Jr, he analyzed the variety of psychological distress in Civil War veterans. In American literature, war changed the language. It was no longer author’s objective to entertain the readers, they wanted their readers to have a conversion inside themselves that would make them behave in a different way when they had finished. Ernest Hemingway in the Big Two Hearted River manages to present a vivid imagery of war through Nick Adams and its effects. However, he does this without including any actual wartime situations …show more content…

Dilon Carroll, in "The God Who Shielded Me Before, Yet Watches Over Us All “suggest that war greatly affects Confederate soldiers psychologically and the stress the Confederate soldiers endure forced them to turn to religion as self-therapy. Carroll states, "Most people often think of memory as something that should be accurate. But when it comes to trauma, memory often softens and eludes its features to make them more bearable. For Williams, however, the details of the past were not only horribly clear but seemed constantly before him or just below the surface of his consciousness, always threatening to recur"(7). Williams suffered psychological injury, which gave him war triggered anxiety. The invasive imagines and dreams of carnage haunted him. The same notion of suffering is relatable to Nick. As Nick was observing the trout on the bridge, “Nick’s heart tightened as the trout moved. He felt all the old feelings"(Hemingway 110). As Nick was in a calm, meditative trance, like Williams, Nick's traumatic experience resurfaced haunting his conscienceless. Nick's nostalgia about "the old feelings" are sentimental of a time where he could enjoy

Open Document