All Quiet On The World War Critical Analysis

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Vernon Kroft once said, “War changes everything. The world is never the same after a war. Any war. There are holes… missing parts… The best you can do is pick up the pieces that are left and start to build again. It’ll never be the way it was before.” War is detrimental to the world and leaves it in shambles. Nothing escapes the terror that war strikes in the world. In Erich Maria Remarque 's book All Quiet on the Western Front the ramifications caused by World War I become detrimental to nature. Paul Bäumer, a German soldier, experiences the horror because of the war and he realizes that the natural world is disastrously affected. Throughout the story nature condemns war and its malicious acts. The repetition of nature as a motif portrays war as vile. Through Paul 's experiences he comes to …show more content…

The distress war causes leaves scars for Paul Bäumer and his fellow soldiers, but the horrific war also disfigures nature 's innocent creatures. Whilst Paul and his fellow soldiers are on the front line, a group of German horses is acutely injured. Hearing the cries of the wounded horses Paul declares, "It 's unendurable. It is the moaning of the world, it is the martyred creation, wild with anguish, filled with terror and groaning" (Remarque 62). The horses represent all the defenseless forms of nature that are annihilated by the work of humans fighting in the war. When the horses wail, the sound is intolerable for Paul and the soldiers because it is the earth 's way of avenging the deaths of the horses. The horses also wail as a way of revolting against the pain that is inflicted on them. Like the horses, war also wreaks havoc on the natural

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