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All Quiet On The Westerd Front Essay

, Research Paper

“All Quiet on the Western Front” was written in a first person style. The story was told by Paul Ba?mer, a nineteen year old student, convinced to enlist with the German army by his schoolmaster, Kantorek. Along with many of his friends from school, he is trained under Corporal Himmelstoss, a strictly disciplined commander who dislikes Paul because of his “defiance.”

When sent to the front, Paul, along with his other friends, made new friendships that would last throughout time. His newly made friend/commander, was a man named Stanislaus Katczinsky. As a man of forty years of age he was an wise old man as well as a friend to the young eighteen and nineteen year old recruits.

After visiting the front for long stretches Paul is given fourteen days of leave where he can visit his ill mother at his own home. After this leave he is sent back to training and then back to the front. His trip is lengthened when he discovers that his unit has been reassigned to another area. Finding his unit, he reunites with his friends and joins up with them again in the war efforts.

While searching in “no man’s land,” Paul is confined to a shell hole for a long night. During this night a French soldier falls in the hole and Paul stabs him. The hours to come are very hard for Paul as he comforts and waits for the Englishman to die.

Paul’s group has a stroke of luck when they were assigned to defend a village. Since no inhabitants were left they were able to go through the houses to take and use whatever they wanted. This luck, however, did not last forever. One day the French came and began shelling the village. While evacuating Paul and his friend Albert Kropp were injured by gunshot wounds. They were bandaged up and sent on a train back home.

This ride home took a turn. When Kropp got a fever he was scheduled to be dropped off at the next stop. In order for Paul to stay with his friend, he had to convince the nurse that he also was sick from infection. After being dropped off they were taken to a Catholic hospital to be treated. After a few weeks Kropp’s leg is overcome with infection and is amputated at the thigh. After a few more weeks Paul and Kropp parted, Paul going back to the war and Kropp going home.

Returning to the front was hard for Paul. The days were getting cold and one by one he watched his friends die. The hardest loss was that of Kat. After Kat had been shot, Paul had to carry Kat to the nearest dressing station a few miles away. Stopping every few minutes to rest, Paul frequently checked to make sure that Kat, even with his injury, was ok. When at last Paul reached the dressing station the nurse told him that Kat was dead. When Paul checked again a small shell fragment had just penetrated that back of Kat’s head. He was still even warm. Kat was the last of Paul’s friends to die in the war. Then, in October of 1918, Paul finally fell. The book describes his death as, “…his face had an expression of calm, as though almost glad the end had come.” The war ended the next month.