preview

An Analysis OfOld Solider, By Charles Simic

Decent Essays
Open Document

In “Old Solider”, Charles Simic portrays a ten-year-old boy who is trying to escape the harsh realities of war through his imagination. Simic uses metaphors, descriptive phrases, and irony to further develop his poem with an aspiring, grim, and mischievous tone. This piece of work is told from a ten-year-old civilians point of view who is the midst of chaos. The author was born in 1938 in Yugoslavia just before the start of World War II in 1939. The war continued through 1945 causing numerous fatalities and injuries. Consequently, young Simic was forced to be surrounded by the bloodshed which left an everlasting imprint on his life. Simic is a realistic poet; therefor, most of his poems were influenced by his environment.
Simic begins the poem by stating: By the time I was ten, I had fought in hundreds of battles, Had innumerable wounds, Had slain thousands. (1-4)
The first stanza tells the reader that the writer glorified war and hoped to be a solider. In the second stanza, the battles that he speaks of aren’t real, they’re battles that he has imagined. The battles and innumerable wounds could be metaphors for his hard upbringing (3-4). The poem uses a lot of figurative language to portray the authors youthful imagination. Simic imagines what it would be like to be a solider, by playing with cardboard swords and boasting about “Slain thousands” (4). Like most children, Simic doesn’t completely understand the full concept of war and the

Get Access