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Metaphors In The Things They Carried

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Human beings carry many different things with them, both physical and metaphorical. In Tim O’Brien’s “The Things They Carried,” he presents an exploration of the many burdens that people can carry. Throughout the story, he presents many detailed descriptions of the equipment and tangible things that the characters carry with them to help them survive their ordeal physically. O’Brien also describes the various ‘things’ that the men carry both physically and emotionally to help them deal with the mental and emotional stress of war. O’Brien also details the additional ‘things’ that the men pick up over the course of their experiences, both physical and mental/emotional. Through the metaphor of carrying objects, the descriptions of the items and …show more content…

The author states that the listed items above have a weight from 15 to 20 pounds, and as other specific items are listed for each of the characters each one comes with its weight in pounds and ounces (367). The weights of every weapon are given in terms of the maximum and minimum possible, like the M-16 described as “7.5 pounds unloaded, 8.2 pounds with its full twenty-round magazine” (369). The effect of the lists and weights serves to press the idea to the reader that the characters are all carrying heavy loads and that each item has a purpose, whether for combat, survival, or emotional support. they also carry the power of their weapons, they carry the diseases, the viruses of Vietnam, carry the country itself, its land and its ambiguities; they carry the intangible, sorrow, terror, love, nostalgia and their reputation. This striking inventory of what weighs on soldiers' shoulders and souls creates an inextricable link between the objects and events of war, and the intimate experience and inner conflict of the soldier, between reality and insight, between facts and …show more content…

For example, one of the “weightiest” items in “The Things They Carried” are a bundle of letters carried by Lt. Cross from Martha, a girl he had some romantic encounters with back home. The letters themselves do not carry much physical weight, as they are so light their mass is not described, and are not even love letters. However, they carry a great deal of emotional weight for Lt. Cross, as he reads the “mostly chatty, elusive on the matter of love” letters every night and fantasize about a relationship with Martha (366). The emotional weight is reinforced by Cross’ imagined cave-in in a tunnel, trapped with Martha; he imagines being buried alive with her, fantasizing about being smothered in a “Dense, crushing love” (373). Repeatedly over the course of the story, Cross returns to his fantasies of Martha, reading and rereading letters, gazing at the two pictures he carries of her, imagining new scenarios, creating a depth to their relationship that Cross knows isn’t there, and reliving events with dreams of “things he should’ve done” (369). Cross constantly carries, and sometimes sucks on, a “good-luck pebble” sent to him by his beloved

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