Throughout the dark and horrifying pictures of death and inhumanity, Erich Remarque scatters a profound brilliance, a redeeming quality, in one of the strikingest war novels of each(prenominal) time, All Quiet on the Western Front. During this stirring novel, 20-year-old capital of Minnesota Bäumer, a German soldier of World warf be I, was thrown into a frenzied world of blood and bombardment, flung unmercifully into the vile world of war. Nonetheless, the senseless difference in which capital of Minnesota and his fellow soldiers struggled had awakened in [them] the sense of comradeship (Remarque, 274). This bright sense of brotherhood was sadly all that these hardened and valiant men had to keep them trudging ahead, all that they had to give them a spring to look forward to tomorrow. Between the often unseen heroes of battle lies an unfaltering devotion to each other, devotion stronger than these men themselves. capital of Minnesotas treasure relationships saved him more than than once throughout the novel. In the attend of fear, death, destruction and hopelessness, he turned to these faithful men, his comrades:
They be more to me than life, these voices, they argon more than motherliness and more than fear; they are the strongest, most comforting thing there is anywhere: they are the voices of my comrades (212).![]()
        The most remarkable picture of comradeship created by Remarque is the intragroup loyalty and understanding that the war had forged between Paul and kat. As they sat together roasting a stolen goose, we are given our first glimpse into the extraordinary bond that these men, abysmally forlorn, shared. Though they had not known each other for great lengths of time, they felt completely at ease with one another, so intimate that [they] do not even speak (94). patch bringing up food to the trenches near the end of the novel, Kat was hit...
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