CliffsNotes To Go Sweepstakes -- Enter Now to Win an iPod touch Loaded with Cliffs Study Apps

Did "New Moon" change your allegiance to the Twilight characters?

Still Team Edward
Still Team Jacob
Switched from Team Edward to Team Jacob
Switched from Team Jacob to Team Edward
I still cannot decide!

View Results

Critical Essays

The Use of Figurative Language in The Red Badge of Courage

To describe the officers' actions in preparing the soldiers for an offensive, Crane uses a simile to make an understandable comparison: "[The officers] were like critical shepherds struggling with sheep." Crane describes the regiment while resting as, "The regiment snorted and blew." (This is what horses do after running. The horse metaphor works very well for a regiment that has just run across a battlefield.) The regiment is also described as being "the dejected remnant," "the depleted regiment," "a machine run down." These images provide a picture of a tired group of men.

Crane, through Henry, identifies the flag metaphorically in the following manner, "It was a goddess. . . . It was a woman, red and white, hating and loving, that called him with the voice of his hopes" (examples of metaphor and personification).

Crane also combines a simile with the use of personification to describe Henry's run across a battlefield: "The youth ran like a madman to reach the woods before a bullet could discover him." This sentence combines a clear simile ("like a madman") with a personification of the bullet — the bullet tries to "discover" Henry, discovery being a very human endeavor.

The use of personification in describing the smoke as "lazy and ignorant" helps the reader to feel the frustration of the troops. The use of smoke, haze, fog, and clouds as symbols for the confusion of war, for the atmosphere surrounding war, are constant throughout the novel.

At the same time that Crane describes the ugliness of war metaphorically, Crane also uses descriptive vocabulary words and figures of speech to highlight the beauty of nature in the midst of death and destruction. The reader should note the use of a flower metaphor in the image, "the shells looked to be strange war flowers bursting into fierce bloom."


The Use of Figurative Language in The Red Badge of Courage: 1 2 3 4 5 6
CliffsNotes® To Go
Literature reviews for the iPhone™ & iPod touch® help you study anywhere, anytime.
Learn more now!
The Ultimate Learning Experience!
WATCH the film and READ the lit note for a fast way to study!
Learn more!