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Symbolism In The Things They Carried

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The Things They Carried
Lorraine Fonger
South University
Composition III/Literature
ENG1300
Colette Morrow
October 29, 2017 The Things They Carried
How many “things” do you carry with you every day? Everybody carries things that symbolize who they are or where they are from. Those things may be heavy, light, or even things that you cannot see. In the short story “The Things They Carried” by Tim O’Brien, he introduces a lot of symbolism in every object mentioned, many of them you can see, some you can’t see. In this short story, the narrator tells of the burdens carried by each soldier and the meanings of these things to the men. The things they carried described in detail the soldier’s emotional issues in their lives …show more content…

Often, they would share the load of machinery by taking turns carrying the equipment and giving relief to the men that routinely carried it. This is just some of the things that were specialized to an individual according to their size or skill. But the soldiers also carried things that weren’t so necessary, yet they would bring these things along anyway for certain personal reasons and a sense of security.
Not only did the soldiers carry heavy physical burdens, they carried heavy emotional burdens of fear and the need to maintain ties to home. According to Evans, “Grief, terror, love, longing—these were intangibles, but the intangibles had their own mass and specific gravity, they had tangible weight” (Evans, 2015). O’Brien clearly defines one of the hardest things the men had to carry, “By and large they carried these things inside, maintaining the masks of composure.” (O’Brien, 1990, p. 184). Henry Dobbins, who was a big man, always had a lot of extra food with him. He burned up food very quickly and went through food much faster than most. He would also carry his girlfriend’s pantyhose around his neck. This was his way of telling everybody that he had a girlfriend at home and was sexually active when he had breaks. The pantyhose symbolized his masculinity and the normal, rational existence of home. Ted Lavender was the guy who carried tranquilizers, 6-7 ounces of dope, and more rounds of ammunition than

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