The
tall soldier’s information proves to be incorrect. The
army does not move. But Henry is still troubled by the question
of whether he will run away when battle begins, and he gets
frustrated because he knows there is no way he can answer this
question until the time comes. He wonders what the rest of the
men are thinking, but he dare not ask. Sometimes he thinks they
are all heroes; at other times he convinces himself they are
all fearful of the prospect of battle. In his anxiety he frequently
reproaches himself for his thoughts, and sometimes fixes his
anger upon the generals, whom he regards as intolerably slow.
One morning, just
before dawn, Henry is convinced that a battle is imminent. The
regiment begins to march. There is a vigorous discussion among
the men as to what will happen. They seem in good spirits, but
Henry is weighed down by his own thoughts. At nightfall they
stop in a field and set up camp. Henry keeps to himself as much
as possible. He lies down in the grass and wishes he were back
home on the farm. The loud private, whose name is Wilson, joins
him. Wilson believes there will soon be a big battle, and that
they will be victorious. Henry asks him how he knows he will
not run when the time comes. Wilson says of course he will not
run. His confident reply makes Henry feel miserable, since it
is clear that their viewpoints have nothing in common. He torments
himself with his fears about how he will react to battle, and
eventually falls asleep.
The following night,
the military columns file across the river on two pontoon bridges.
The next morning they march along a road that leads them deep
into a forest. Then at dawn one morning, the men start to run
down a road together. There is the sound of distant firing.
Henry realizes the time for battle has come. It is impossible
for him to escape. His mind plays tricks with him, and he convinces
himself that he never wanted to go to war; the government had
forced him into it. They cross a stream and climb a hill. A
skirmish is already underway; he sees the body of a dead soldier,
and expects the enemy to fall upon them at any moment. He thinks
the generals are all idiots, and considers shouting a warning
to all the men. Harried by a young lieutenant, Henry quickens
his pace. The regiment marches from place to place apparently
aimlessly. Henry is impatient, and complains to Jim Conklin
and Wilson.
In the afternoon
the regiment, having just gone over the same ground it covered
earlier, enters a new region. Henry thinks it would be better
to get killed instantly; that at least would end his worries.
When they get close to the battle, Jim confesses to Henry that
he expects to be killed. He gives Henry a packet of his belongings
and tells him to convey it to his, Jim’s, family.
The men of the regiment
exchange rumors of what is happening in the battle. The noise
increases and the bullets begin to fly close to them. The lieutenant
is shot in the hand. As the battle intensifies, the men of the
new regiment are breathless with horror. Many men are fleeing
from the battle, although Henry has not yet seen what they are
fleeing from. He resolves to get a good view of it, thinking
all the time that once he has done this, he will probably run
faster than any of them.
Analysis
Although surrounded by his comrades, Henry is very much alone
with his thoughts, knowing that the question he has asked of
himself will soon be answered. His verbal abuse of the generals,
which other characters also express, show that this is a novel
written from the point of view of the ordinary soldier who knows
nothing of what his generals are planning. The commanders in
this war are seen only from afar.
Although this is
a realistic novel, many passages are tinged with irony. For
example, there is a quiet irony in the description of how the
soldiers of the new regiment, as they march, start to look like
more experienced soldiers. But there is one thing about them
that is different from veteran regiments: “Veteran regiments
in the army were likely to be very small aggregations of men”
(ch. 3, p. 32). What this means is that large numbers of the
soldiers in the regiment have been killed. The understated way
of expressing this fact is probably more horrifying than a simple
statement of the number of casualties would have been. And the
passage that follows, in which other soldiers mistake the decimated
regiment for a brigade (which is much smaller than a regiment)
underlines the irony. It is also significant that rather than
react with horror, the other soldiers laugh when they realize
their mistake. This is a defense mechanism whereby they keep
the knowledge of their own possible, even likely, fate at bay.
In these chapters,
Henry is contrasted with two other characters. The first is
the lieutenant. Henry considers himself to have a fine mind,
and he contrasts himself with the lieutenant who roughly pushes
him on faster. Henry regards the lieutenant as a mere brute.
Later in the novel, however, this will change. The two men will
find they have a lot in common and they will form a bond.
Henry is also contrasted
with Jim Conklin, who gives every appearance of being brave
and confident, and with Wilson, who feels sorry for himself
and expects to be killed. (But at least Wilson admits to Henry
what he is feeling; Henry always keeps his thoughts to himself.)
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