red badge of courage.txt

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STEPHEN CRANE:  THE AUTHOR AND HIS
TIMES 

  When The Red Badge of Courage was published in 1895 (it first
came out in installments in a Philadelphia newspaper at the end
of 1894), the Civil War had been over for thirty years.  In some
ways Americans were forgetting the war.  In the South, whites
tried to undo some of the war's effects.  By the 1890s many of
the old Confederate leaders were back in power, and blacks had
lost their right to vote, and couldn't go to school with whites.
But in other ways Americans liked to remember the Civil War.  In
little towns in New England and the Middle West they built
monuments to Civil War dead--something they had not done after
the Revolution or the War of 1812.  Stories about the war were
tales of bravery and heroism.  Its songs were stirring anthems
like "The Battle Hymn of the Republic." 

  Imagine, then, how shocking it must have been to turn the
pages of The Red Badge of Courage.  Here was a novel where you
didn't even find out the hero's name--if you could call a boy
who ran away from battle a hero--until halfway through the book.
Instead of being wounded by Confederate fire, this so-called
hero gets his "red badge of courage" from a panicked fellow
soldier.  Henry Fleming's best friend, the tall soldier, Jim
Conklin, dies horribly, jerking around alone in the middle of a
field, rather than expiring decorously in Henry's arms with his
mother's name on his lips.  When Henry overhears a general
speaking with his aide, he wants to know when he's getting his
cigars, not about the progress of the battle.  And as if it
weren't enough that this Stephen Crane stripped away the glories
of war, who had ever written in such language?  Most novels were
graced by flowing sentences, ample paragraphs, and chapters it
took a whole evening to read.  What was this?  Who had ever
heard anything as weird as Crane's language? 

  Those of us who watched "M*A*S*H" or read Catch-22 are not
shocked by Crane's vision of war.  But readers in 1895 couldn't
wait to find out who Stephen Crane was.  One veteran insisted
that Crane had been in his regiment at Antietam (one of the
great battles of the Civil War).  He was wrong.  Stephen Crane
was a twenty-four-year-old journalist who had never seen a
battle, much less fought in one; a young man who had flunked out
of two colleges, where he had displayed more talent for playing
baseball and drinking beer than for writing.  (Several years
later, after Crane covered a war in Greece as a journalist, he
confessed with relief to his friend, the English novelist Joseph
Conrad, that "The Red Badge of Courage is all right.") 

  So how did a twenty-four-year-old who had never seen combat
create a novel that would forever change the way Americans wrote
about war?  One answer might be that he copied the style of a
European novelist.  In fact, European writing in the 1890s was
beginning to change in some exciting ways.  Two French writers,
Emile Zola and Gustave Flaubert, published novels that outraged
proper people.  Zola in particular wrote in a way that people
found brutal and shocking.  He wrote about prostitutes and coal
miners, people who did not appear in the novels of the day.  And
he tried to show that people were in the grip of
forces--heredity, environment, and instinct--that they could not
control.  Some modern critics have claimed that Zola's novel La
Debacle was one inspiration for The Red Badge of Courage.
Stephen Crane had read some of Zola's novels--in English, since
his French wasn't that good--and he knew about La Debacle,
although nobody knows for sure whether he read the novel or only
a review of it.  War and Peace and Sebastapol, both by the
Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy, have also been named as possible
sources for The Red Badge of Courage.  Again, Crane may have
read the books, but he also may have read only reviews. 

  Crane liked to read, and in high school he had enjoyed
nineteenth-century British novels and the Greek and Roman
classics.  But he was always more interested in two other
things:  playing baseball and acting rowdy--drinking beer,
playing cards, smoking, and swearing, all the things that would
have made his minister father turn over in his grave.  It
doesn't seem likely that Stephen Crane would have been inspired
by other people's books. 

  Baseball and being tough were probably what helped Crane
imagine what war was like.  In fact, Crane once said, "I believe
that I get my sense of the rage of conflict on the football
field.  The psychology is the same." Actually, baseball was
Crane's sport.  He was an excellent player, and loved to show
off by playing without a glove.  Crane claimed that when he was
at boarding school, a place called Claverack College on the
Hudson River in New York State, "I never learned anything.  But
heaven was sunny blue and no rain fell on the diamond when I was
playing baseball." When Crane went to college (despite its name,
Claverack was a high school), first at Lafayette College in
Easton, Pennsylvania, and then at Syracuse University in
Syracuse, New York, the amount of time he spent playing baseball
contributed to his flunking out. 

  Crane wasn't being fair to Claverack.  He learned something
there, something about being a soldier.  For Claverack was a
military academy, and Crane's mother had sent him there because
the only thing he loved more than baseball was playing soldier.
(Once, as a boy in Asbury Park, New Jersey, Crane had gotten so
involved in a game of war that he buried a friend in the sand.)
At Claverack Stephen practiced military drills.  And in the
evenings, around tables in the dining hall, the teachers, former
soldiers, sometimes reminisced about their experiences in the
Civil War.  Stephen's favorite, General John Bullock Van Petten,
had fought at Antietam, which the battle described in The Red
Badge of Courage resembles in some ways (although it is closer
to the battle of Chancellorsville in May 1863).  Some of the
stories that showed up in The Red Badge of Courage may have been
planted in Stephen's head by General Van Petten's tales. 

  But in the end, Stephen Crane's ability to describe war and
to get inside soldiers' heads probably came from the kind of
person he was, and the way he had grown up.  Stephen Crane was a
minister's son--and a minister's grandson and nephew, too--and
like at least some other boys in that position, he wanted to
show people that he was a regular guy.  That need may have led
Stephen to a career in journalism (although both of his parents
also wrote, as did two of his brothers), and to a desire to
shock more respectable people. 

  The struggle to find out what he was really made of, and to
test his courage in battle, was as important to Stephen Crane as
it was to Henry Fleming.  After The Red Badge of Courage was
published he traveled as a journalist to Cuba, then fighting for
its independence from Spain, and to Europe, where he eventually
settled in England.  He became a respected war correspondent for
several newspapers, showing a great deal of bravery, and he
continued to write stories, novels, and poems.  Like Henry,
Stephen could have said that "He had been to touch the great
death, and found that, after all, it was but the great death.
He was a man." Stephen Crane died of tuberculosis on June 5,
1900, five months before his 29th birthday.  If he had lived,
would he have, as Henry did, "rid himself of the red sickness of
battle" and "turned...  with a lover's thirst to images of
tranquil skies, fresh meadows, cool brooks"?  It is hard to
know.  It's almost impossible to imagine Stephen Crane as an old
man. 

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THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE:  THE PLOT 

  The Red Badge of Courage describes how Henry Fleming, a young
soldier from New York State, first experiences fighting at the
Battle of Chancellorsville during the American Civil War.  At
first Henry is nervous, and even runs away after one of the
first skirmishes, but eventually he returns to his regiment and
fights bravely.  By the battle's end, Henry has learned a lot
about himself and the meaning of courage.  He has grown up, and
so have many of his fellow soldiers. 

  This is the plot of The Red Badge of Courage.  The novel does
not tell a story so much as it focuses on the perceptions and
development of one young man.  We see what war looks like to
Henry, and the effect it has on his thoughts and feelings.  In
many chapters there is action--Henry's friend dies, or the
Confederate soldiers charge and the Union troops push them back.
But in other chapters nothing much happens except in Henry's
mind.  Because Henry's emotions swing back and forth--sometimes
he feels proud and brave, other times like a criminal--the book
does not follow a straight line either. 

  As The Red Badge of Courage opens, we meet Henry Fleming, who
has signed up for the army against his mother's wishes, full of
dreams of becoming a hero.  But so far he has done nothing but
sit around the camp.  With all that time on his hands, Henry
begins to worry whether he will be able to fight bravely, or
whether he'll run away when the shooting starts.  He talks to
some of the others about it, but because he cannot really
explain his fears, he feels more and more alone.  Jim Conklin, a
friend from home, thinks he'll do whatever the other boys do; a
loud soldier named Wilson is full of boasts.  The first sight of
battle is terrifying, and Henry feels worse and worse.  Even the
loud soldier, convinced he's about to be killed, gives Henry
some letters for his family. 

  During the first skirmish Henry fights well, feeling as much
part of the regiment as the fingers of a hand.  They hold the
enemy back.  But while they are relaxing, the enemy strikes
again.  Now Henry is exhausted and terrified.  When two men
standing near him turn and run, he throws dow...
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