There was a young guy who joined the British Army at the age of 17 in order to do something with his life that he believed to be of significance. He wanted to serve Queen and country. He wanted to experience war. He wanted to fight. He wanted to win. He wanted to be validated as important and special by others.
After 8 years of voluntary military service, he handed his notice and ended his contract for what he believed would be a 'normal ' life out side of the HM Forces. He wanted a normal life, he wanted some normal and consistent relationships, and he wanted a normal job and a girlfriend he could see whenever he wanted.
He wanted to feel valued somewhere, and he wanted to feel important. He wanted to know that he 'd be missed somewhere when he wasn 't around. He wanted to be his own person and free from small-minded military regimentals, free from the restrictions of rules and conformity to legalism, he wanted out, he wanted freedom.
He wanted to make progress in life. He wanted to connect with new people and develop new relationships. He wanted to know love and he wanted to know freedom. He wanted some certainty and needed to become both confident and secure in who he was. He needed to pay the bills, he needed some direction and purpose, he needed to make sense of his life, he needed peace from his demons and the memories of his past.
He needed change, he needed to take risks and step out in faith that even in the midst of uncertainty, he 'd be able to develop who he
He resigned his position in the army and quit so that he would not have to fight. His friends send him four feathers, a sign of cowardice. His girlfriend left him in the result of this (Kapur, The Four Feathers). He was ashamed of himself and desperately wanted to overcome this reputation, so he goes to the Sudan, helps the Sudanese fight, and finally finds true love back home in England.
guts and that he wanted to survive. In return for his favor of helping the guard,
children to raise. He was not getting enough attention as he wanted at home, he got his
drugs he craved them more and more until he would finally do anything and everything to get them. Drugs made him want to
to tell his war story to people, but he finds out no one is interested in listening to him. Krebs
“Personal honor is the one thing valued more than life itself by the majority of men” (McPherson 77). The reoccurring theme of brotherhood in the story plays a major role as to why a soldier has come to war and why he performs on the battlefield. Brotherhood would be the best explanation for a soldier’s fight to protect one’s self and his comrades.
His troops were losing ground and their hopes of winning were slim. The attack was failing and he was one of the few soldiers still alive. He ran out of ammo and stood there playing “Will Ye No Come Back Again” on his bagpipes until he was knocked unconcious by a German grenade. He was moved to a concentration camp, where he escaped through the drainage system and was recaptured where he was moved to another camp in Austria. He then escaped from the Austrian camp and found some American Soldiers in Italy and after convincing them that he was really a British officer, they took him and let him heal. After healing from his wounds, he was sad to hear that the war was over and he had missed most of
He found reasons for leaving instead of staying like everyone else. He was determined to leave after he made a discovery that he thought would benefit him and finally help him to become a council member. “This hope was short lived because his electric light bulb frightens the council. They tell him that his unwanted discovery would cause chaos in their world. His discovery could not easily be explained nor would it be accepted” (Townsell and Kritsonis 4). He wanted a new life that he could not get from staying in that society. He knew that he was not meant to live in a place he was forced to conform to what everyone else was doing because he wanted to discover so much more. Equality 7-2521 is an individual with so much more to offer that he knows he cannot stay there forever. He uses this determination as motivation to leave, he is in turn saving his life. “Here, on this mountain, I and my sons and my chosen friends shall build our new land and our fort. And it will become as the heart of the earth, lost and hidden at first, but beating, beating louder each day” (Rand 104). This showing that he will make a new life for him and his future family. He is no longer going to follow what he grew up in, instead he is choosing a new and better
While he desperately was trying to run away from the war he did not care where he was going just as long as he got away, like as he said, “We ran for hours, deeper into the forest. The path had ended, but we kept running until the sky swallowed the sun and gave birth to the moon”(Beah 98). Desperation to flee the war is something he has common with the people he soon would killed. He did not want to become a soldier as he saw what affects the Rebel boy soldiers had. Soon after he became a soldier he was transferred to a rehabilitation center where he then would become a soldier.
to join them. He said he 'd work for his keep. They all agreed on it, and now
Because he would want to get away. Or a poet, that tells a story of glory.
He wanted a different life, a different identity from
His employer was trying to shaft him. He fought for his rights, not knowing what the outcome would be, but knowing this was something he felt he must do.
Maybe, just maybe, he wanted to be human. To leave behind that legacy of ferocity and honor, and take up the legacy of farmland and creativity. And that feeling was usually the strongest when he was around one person in particular...
He didn’t know he can build a life outside of the one he was raised to know.