Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Journeys explored in Journey's End
- Stanhope
- Audience has prejudice views before we meet his
character because of how others discuss him in the beginning
- Subject of gossip
- Drinking habits
- Violent encounters with:
- Raleigh- ripping the letter from his hand
- Page 46: "Stanhope clutches Raleigh's wrist and tears the
letter from his hand."
- Hibbert- threatening to kill him
- Aggressive towards him- page 86
- Page 54-58
- "Stanhope turns and thrusts him roughly back."
- "(He takes out his revolver)"
- Confides in and comforts others
- Comforts Raleigh as he dies painfully
- Page 100-103
- "(He bathe's the boys face)"
- "Lay him down here"
- Osborne's bed// Significant
- "(lightly runs his fingers over Raleigh's tousled hair)"
- Contrasts to him getting aggressive towards Raleigh: his arrival, his
sister, the letters, calling him Dennis
- Raleigh
- Beginning
- Almost obsessed with Stanhope?
- Admiration
- Specifically goes to his command
- Naïve
- Doesn't understand the danger of war
- Excited for the raid
- "Awfully exciting"
- Innocence
- Doesn't understand the impact of war
- Warned by Osborne on his arrival about how Stanhope won't be
the same Dennis from school
- Starts to understand
- Notices Stanhope's drinking
- "And yet you can sit there and drink champagne"
- Death
- Still quite innocent
- However not part of
a team at the end
- Doesn't join them for
celebatory dinner after
Osborne's death
- Compares injury from the war to that
of a rugby incident at school
- "I got kicked in just the same place at Rugger; it--soon wore off."
- Naïve
- Hopeful
- Creates hope for the other characters?
- Strong
- Exit to the front line
- "Do you want me to go up?"
- No hesitation like Hibbert
- Gets straight on with it
- "Cheero- Stanhope"
- Hibbert
- Homesick
- Frightened
- Puts off going to the front line at the end
- Drinks water: swirls it round his mouth to waste time
- Page 97: "(Slowly rinsing his mouth with every sip)"
- Page 97: "There's no appalling hurry is there?"
- No team spirit
- Doesn't follow camaraderie
- Makes excuses to go home
- Lying
- Nerves in his face hurt
- This feeling on him being terrified and
wanting to escape continues from the
start to the ending of the play
- Osborne
- Avuncular
- Other characters call him 'uncle'
- Motherly figure?
- Tucks Stanhope in bed at night
- Was a teacher
- Hierachy
- Balancing force
- Taken away once he dies
- Everything becomes unstable
- We don't see a change in his character as such
- He is genuine throughout and helps the others
- Adds a sense of normality to the situation they are all facing
- Trotter
- Normalises the situation slightly
- Humour
- Love for food
- Jolly
- Singing
- Friendly character throughout
- Doesn't seem as affected by the war as other characters
- E.g.
- Stanhope's alcohol abuse
- However he does tell stories about home sometimes
- His way of coping