Frederick And Catherine example essay topic

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"Evidently it did not matter whether I was there or not". (Pg. 16) This quote shows that Henry doesn't really believe he is a part of this war and the anguish that comes from it. Only later in the novel when he falls deeper in love with Catherine, does he actually see the war as people should see it. Also this is one of the reasons why he deserts the Italian army. He saw the Italian army so confused and disordered that he had no reason to stay. He would rather go to and stay with Catherine, where it was a more controlled environment.

"I didn't know about anything then. I thought it would be worse for him. I thought perhaps he couldn't stand it and then of course he was killed and that was the end of it."I don't know."Oh, yes", she said. "That's the end of it" (Pg. 19) This quote shows that Catherine knows that death is the end of all things. She started to believe in this idea when her fianc " ee died. The quote also shows that Frederick doesn't believe that death is the end of all things.

He never really understands this concept until Catherine dies after having the baby. This is also when he realizes that he must live a life of discipline to fully understand the world. I did not care what I was getting into... I did not love Catherine Barkley nor had any idea of loving her. This was a game, like bridge, in which you said things instead of playing cards. Like bridge you had to pretend you were playing for money or playing for some stakes.

Nobody had mentioned what the stakes were". (Pg. 31) In this passage when Frederick is talking about how he is making his love affair with Catherine like a game, it shows that during this time period, soldiers just wanted to have short term relationships. Frederick never really thought during this time in the novel how things would end or the consequences that would result from it. He just had one thing on his mind and that was keeping the war out of it. Thinking about a woman would be a great idea for doing just that in his mind.

Of course, during the course of the novel, Frederick does fall in love with Catherine which in turns gets him to view the war from a perspective like ordinary people would see it". There, darling. Now you " re all clean inside and out. Tell me.

How many people have you ever loved?"Nobody."Not even me?"Yes, you."How many others really?"None."How many have you-how do you say it? -stayed with?" None."You " re lying to me."Yes."It's all right. Keep right on lying to me. That's what I want you to do. Were they pretty?" (Pg. 104) This quote shows that both Frederick and Catherine are using their love affair to keep their minds off distractions in their lives.

For Frederick it is the war, which he believes, has nothing to do with him. For Catherine it is the loss of her fianc " ee. This quote also shows the beginning of a budding relationship between the two. "All summer and all fall I've operated.

I work all the time. I do everybody's work. All the hard ones they leave to me. By God, baby, I am becoming a lovely surgeon."That sounds better."I never think. No, by God, I don't think; I operate."That's right."But now, baby, it's all over. I don't operate now and I feel like hell.

This is a terrible war, baby. You believe me when I say it. (Pg. 167) In this passage when Rinaldi is talking to Frederick, we can finally see as readers that Rinaldi is not just a plain party goer but a fine surgeon as well. Rinaldi begins to fully understand that he can only find himself when he is operating. He knows that he now has a place where he can succeed in the world and help people at the same time.

As a surgeon, Rinaldi understands that death is the end of all things. This is why Rinaldi has developed the inner discipline to go through life. I did not say anything. I was embarrassed by the words sacred, glorious, and sacrifice and the expression in vain. We had heard them, sometimes standing in the rain almost out of earshot, so that only the shouted words came through, and had read them, on proclamations, now for a long time, and I had seen nothing sacred, and the things that were glorious had no glory and the sacrifices were like the stockyards at Chicago if nothing was done with the meat except to bury it. There were many words that you could not stand to hear and finally only the names of places had dignity.

Certain numbers were the same way and certain dates and these with the names of the places were all you could say and have them mean anything. Abstract words such as glory, honor, courage, or hallow were obscene beside the concrete names of villages, the numbers of roads, the names of rivers, the numbers of regiments and the dates. (Pg. 184-185) In this passage when Frederick meets Gino, it shows Frederick's opposing feelings toward war. He thinks that abstractions such as honor and glory do not explain the truth about war, such as destruction. He believes to discuss war you must leave out tall tales and get down to the grim reality of war. The only way to understand the war is to understand that men will die and villages will be destroyed.

He believes that honor and glory are artificial concepts. When we were out past the tanneries onto the main road the troops, the motor trucks, the horse-drawn carts and the guns were in one wide slow-moving column. We moved slowly but steadily in the rain, the radiator cap of our car almost against the tailboard of a truck that was loaded high, the load covered with wet canvas. Then the truck stopped. The whole column was stopped. It started again and we went a little farther, then stopped.

I got out and walked ahead, going between the trucks and carts and under the wet necks of the horses. (Pg. 194) This passage shows the great descriptive writings of Hemingway. He wrote in great detail what these soldiers went through in the frontlines of battle. The passage explains how soldiers would have had to crawl through narrow places to get from place to place. Hemingway wants you to feel like you are down in the dirt and mud with the rest of the soldiers while you are reading this section. "I had always expected to become devout.

All my family died very devout. But somehow it does not come". (Pg. 263) This quote shows that Count Gr effi wanted to become a religious man, but he has yet to find religion himself. This is why he asks his friends to pray for him.

He thought that when he was older he would become religious and be able to pray for himself. This shows a lot about his character. Most men would lose faith in the world and themselves if they couldn't find a way to believe. Again, like most of the characters in the novel, he has found an inner discipline to keep faith in his life.