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Irish Airman Myth

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Contrary to what General George S. Patton believed, wars may be fought with weapons, but they are not won by men. War is often characterized by tales of great valor performed by courageous warriors willing to stake their lives in order to defend their country, but such people are few and far between. What history so often neglects is the silent majority of almost any army: the rank and file, the so-called “average Joes” that lose any sense of individuality as they disappear within a horde of identical bodies. Fighters in a war are just that. Fighters. They leave behind whoever they were back home in favor of becoming a anonymous puppet with a rifle fighting a war they may not even care about. Truly, war does not provide a blank canvas upon which each man paints his own epic, rather it strips away whatever identity one possesses and replaces it with that of a brave, yet faceless, soldier. While many stories glamorize the actions of the soldier that goes down in a blaze of glory as he battles marvelously against overwhelming odds for a greater good, not everyone can be that hero of legend. In An Irish Airman foresees his Death by William Butler Yeats, the titular character serving as a pilot in World War I believes that “those that I fight I do not hate,” and “those that I guard I do not love” (Yeats, ll. 3-4). In a moment of grim clarity, the persona realizes that he is not risking his life …show more content…

In times of war, they compensated for the sacrifice of such freedoms with the idea that they are serving something larger than themselves, as if that somehow makes up for the fact that their heroic corpse may be indistinguishable from the next. War does not augment or expand one’s identity, War prepares everyone that encounters it to have their name written identically among 52,021

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