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The Dangers Of Death In Tim O 'Brien's' The Things They Carried?

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Death is final and life is ultimately the greatest thing that anyone can lose. While reading a tragedy that mostly results in death, most of the readers would say that death is the most significant part of the story. Death is the result of the main dangers, which are often physical dangers that do happen to result in death. But the tragedy of death is typically preceded by characters succumbing to other dangers not just physical or main dangers. Just like in the story written by tim O’Brien “The Things They Carried” where a Lieutenant Jimmy Cross has to lead his men through the thick jungles of Vietnam but the Lieutenant himself is unaware that his daydreaming, a danger by the way, which is what he does a lot that will eventually lead to one of his soldiers dead. These dangers that lead to death are known as secondary dangers which happens to be a part of a character’s flaw like pride or paranoia such as in the “The Cask of Amontillado” written by Edgar Allan Poe where this story is all about a man who becomes so obsessed from a grudge no less that drove the main character insane which led to him exact revenge on his friend or “friend” . Emotional burdens can be considered secondary dangers, as Bobbie Ann Mason discusses in her essay “On Tim O’Brien’s ‘The Things They Carried.’”
In “The Things They Carried,” “[the] immediate drama is the effort ... to contain the emotion, to carry it,” (Mason). Emotional baggage can result in a character obsessing over emotions, which

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