what experience of war does jhon brown related to his mother
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On returning from the war front in pathetic condition, John Brown tells his mother is a low voice his experience of war. He reminds his mother how she thought that the best thing that had happened was his going to the war. He says she felt proud of him as he was fighting.
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He tells her the most horrible moments that happened in the war.
- The question has been asked from the poem John Brown by Bob Dylan.
- When he returns from the war front in a pitiful state, he tells his mother about his military experience in a quiet voice.
- He recalls his mother's opinion of going to war being the finest thing that had happened. He claims that while he was battling, she was proud of him and wished she had been in his position.
- He understood he was merely a puppet among the deafening noises of shells exploding and stench of dead people. He didn't have a free will of his own.
- He claims to have questioned what he was doing in the battle, attempting to kill someone or dying. The fact that an enemy soldier was in front of him terrified him. He saw how much his face resembled his with no discernible change.
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