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  1. The “red badge of courage,” a metaphor that gives the novel its title, refers to the bleeding wounds that soldiers sustain during battle. Crane uses this metaphor to describe Henry’s feelings when, having fled the scene of his first battle, he ends up walking alongside a convoy of wounded Union soldiers: At times he regarded the wounded ...

  2. The Red Badge of Courage. The Red Badge of Courage : Metaphor Analysis. Imagery and Metaphor Crane employs a colorful style that abounds in vivid sensory images, as well as similes and metaphors. Opening the book at almost any page, especially in the battle scenes, will produce examples. War is presented in a variety of metaphorical ways.

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  4. Critical Essays The Use of Figurative Language in The Red Badge of Courage. Stephen Crane consistently uses figurative language to create images that vividly describe all aspects of war. For example, in the passage, "The cold passed reluctantly from the earth, and the retiring fogs revealed an army stretched out on the hills, resting," an ...

  5. Metaphor: The Red Badge of Courage shows good use of various metaphors as given in the examples below, i. In the eastern sky there was a yellow patch like a rug laid for the feet of the coming sun; and against it, black and patternlike, loomed the gigantic figure of the colonel on the gigantic horse. (Chapter-2). ii.

  6. A metaphor is a literary tool that writers use to compare two subjects. This comparison does not use the words, 'like,' 'as,' or 'than' to make the comparison. One example of a metaphor is: 'The ...

  7. Allegory. See key examples and analysis of the literary devices Stephen Crane uses in The Red Badge of Courage, along with the quotes, themes, symbols, and characters related to each device. Sort by: Devices A-Z. Chapter.

  8. The Red Badge of Courage challenges the protagonist’s (as well as the reader’s) most bedrock assumptions: the courage that Henry finally musters crucially depends on his having rewritten “his laws of life” and come to a new understanding of the world and his relatively modest place in it. That Henry plans to “remain on his close guard ...

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