Colonel Cathcart is in a
difficult position. He very badly wants to impress his superiors, yet he never
knows when he has managed to impress someone. In addition, he is not even sure
whether he should be trying to impress General Dreedle or General Peckem. His
loyal assistant, Colonel Korn, helps him devise strategies to get ahead, but
Cathcart finds it "degrading to have to depend so thoroughly on someone who had
been educated at a state university" (199). Above all, Colonel Cathcart wants
to be a general, if he could just figure out who he has to impress and what he
needs to do to impress those people. He assumes everything that happens is
either a "black eye" for him or a "feather in his cap," and he often cannot
decide if an incident is one or the other.
He reads a story in The
Saturday Evening Post about a colonel who has his chaplain say prayers with
the bombing group before every mission. He thinks that perhaps if he had his
chaplain say prayers before each mission, he might get into The Saturday
Evening Post. He calls in the chaplain to speak with him. Colonel
Cathcart gives up the plan when he realizes that there are no prayers that are
snappy and upbeat, not to mention that he will have to allow enlisted men to
attend the prayers.
The chaplain is a timid man
who is forced to live in a clearing in the woods because the men are
uncomfortable having a religious figure too close by. He is intimidated by his
own assistant, Corporal Whitcomb, who is an atheist and therefore dislikes the
chaplain. Whitcomb, in fact, talks behind the chaplain's back with a CID man,
who thinks that perhaps the chaplain is the one signing Washington Irving's
name to letters. Whitcomb tells the chaplain that he has helped him out.
"Every time [the CID man] tried to report you to his superiors," he informs the
chaplain, "somebody up at the hospital censors out the details. He's been
going batty for weeks trying to turn you in. I just put a censor's okay on his
letter. That will. let them know that we're not the least bit afraid of having
the whole truth about you come out" (216). Since Whitcomb lacks authority to
censor letters, he signed Washington Irving's name. When the chaplain points
out that this does not seem to be to his advantage, Whitcomb gets angry. The
chaplain accepts this bullying without question.
Nonetheless, the chaplain
musters up the courage to confront Colonel Cathcart in their meeting. The men
are very disheartened to have to fly sixty missions, and he tells Cathcart
this. When Cathcart dismisses his concerns, he pushes forward and expresses
his specific concern about Yossarian, which the colonel dismisses again.
In fact, Yossarian's name
fills Cathcart with dread. He has had other issues with a man named
Yossarian. There was a man who came forward naked to receive a medal from
General Dreedle, which Cathcart is certain was a "black eye" for himself.
Yossarian did this because a man had died and bled on his uniform and he
refused to wear the uniform again after that. Yossarian is also the man who
had gone back over Bologna a second time and had to be awarded a medal to cover
up for the fact that this error cost them a plane.
It also turns out that
Yossarian was behind the moaning that happened when General Dreedle was running
the briefing meeting. Of course, Yossarian was moaning out of desire for the
general's nurse, but then other men started moaning, as well. Cathcart is sure
that this moaning was a "black eye" for him.
Analysis
Heller's style is to
introduce a character in each chapter, naming the chapter after that
character. At first, these chapters seem to be merely character profiles, but
as the book progresses, it is clear that Heller is also weaving a plot through
his character descriptions. Incidents and plot points arise repeatedly from
different characters' points of view. At first, only a little bit is
revealed. For example, the exact nature of Milo's "syndicate" is unclear, but
it keeps coming up in various chapters from different points of view. This
forces the reader to construct the reality, staying actively engaged in fitting
the pieces together.
When Heller does finally
reveal something, the reader has been trying to figure out the truth all along,
so she is more invested in the meaning Heller is trying to convey. For
example, it seems likely that Yossarian's refusal to wear clothes has something
to do with Snowden's death. The reader is still trying to piece the details of
that death together, and this one more detail enriches her interest in both
Yossarian and what happened to Snowden.
Colonel Cathcart is yet one
more officer who is so concerned with his own petty needs that he does not even
think about the men's welfare. "Colonel Cathcart was indefatigable that way, an
industrious, intense, dedicated military tactician who calculated day and night
in the service of himself" (198). While this description is humorous, his
attempts to advance his career can often be quite serious. He keeps adding
more missions to the required total to make himself look better, but his men
need to fly those missions. This selfish demand is why Yossarian is going
crazy and Hungry Joe cannot sleep at night.
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