The Wars Timothy Findley Analysis

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War affects all individuals and changes life radically, as it effects can be psychological and emotional than solely physical, and The Wars by Timothy Findley reveals the spitefulness and willfulness of World War One. Findley digs deep into the many aspects of war and illuminates war being fought on many levels, hence the title, The Wars. Through the physical war of World War One, psychological wars, and the emotional wars; soldiers encounter the several bases of war and enriches the significance of the title as Findley articulates that there are innumerable ‘wars’ and forms of suffering present in the First World War.

At the outset, a major factor of World War One is the immense number of casualties initiated by physical combat in various methods. In the novel The Wars, soldiers demise tragically and towns and homelands are abolished from the battles which alludes the fragility of life. For instance, Findley exemplifies the outcome of a chlorine gas attack and asserts: “When they made their way back through the trench there was no one there alive. They had all been gassed or had frozen to death. Those who lay in water were profiled in ice. Everything was green: their faces—their fingers—and their buttons. And the snow” (Findley 130). This
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Robert Ross witnesses several appalling events throughout the story and displays symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder as the story progresses. Findley composes:

“His temper, you know, was terrible. Once when he thought he was alone and unobserved I saw him firing his gun in the woods at a young tree Other times he would throw things down and break them on the