Character Comparison in Tim O'Brien's "The Things They Carried"

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The central theme of the story is the age-old conflict of life and death. On a more personal level with First Lieutenant Jimmy Cross, the round character and protagonist of "The Things They Carried", it is a conflict of love, his antagonist and of war. The author, Tim O'Brien, is writing about an experience of a tour in the Vietnam conflict. This short story deals with inner conflicts of some individual soldiers and how they chose to deal with the realities of the Vietnam conflict, each in their own individual way as men, as soldiers. There were certain items or supplies that each soldier needed to possess that aided in their survival. Other items were discretionary or optional, not entirely important for the survival of the soldier. The optional items carried or possessed were like a crutch. They were not necessarily important to the remainder of the platoon but helpful to the individual soldier attempting to cope with the realities of the conflict. Two of these soldiers were: Kiowa and Ted Lavender. The most desirable way to describe Ted Lavender was scared. They were all scared. Scared of dying. The most suitable way for Lavender to deal with this scared feeling was to carry tranquilizers and about 6 ounces of marijuana. He also carried more than the required amount of ammunition. I believe Lavender's reasoning is as follows; running out of ammo is a soldiers worst nightmare, especially in a firefight with enemy personnel. Without ammo you cannot shoot at the enemy and kill him. If you cannot kill your enemy chances are he will kill you and then you are dead. In the story, "The Things They Carried", Lavender could be referred to as a flat character. Scared, I believ... ... middle of paper ... ... dog, in "To Build a Fire" had instincts to know that something was wrong. Paragraph 16, in "To Build a Fire" But the dog knew; all its ancestry knew, and it had inherited the knowledge. Kiowa's instincts told him that the platoon's situation at Than Khe was not good. There were no clouds, birds, or people. It was hot and there was no wind. There was no movement. He must have felt something deep down just like the dog in "To Build a Fire." I think that this is why Kiowa did not have any feelings toward Lavender when he got shot. Death, it cannot be prevented from happening, no matter how many bullets you carry, or how high you get. Kiowa, an Indian, a soldier, a warrior, he is just there, in Vietnam, at war, carrying on a tradition, carrying the distrusting feelings of the white man and most important carrying the pride of his people.

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