All Quiet on the Western Front Patriotism Quotes

How we cite our quotes: All quotations are from All Quiet on the Western Front.

Quote #4

GENTLEMAN 1: I'm glad to know you, young man, I'm glad to know you. And how are things out there? Terrible, eh? Terrible. But we must carry on. After all, you do at least get decent food out there. Naturally, it's worse here. Naturally. But the best for our soldiers all the time. That's our motto: the best for our soldiers.

ALL: The best for our soldiers.

GENTLEMAN 1: But you must give the Frenchies a good licking! And if you boys want to come home, let me show you what you must do before you can come home. Give us a hand there, men.

Paul and his fellow soldiers may have lost their chauvinist zeal, but that's not true of the people of his hometown. Without experience the atrocities of the Front firsthand, Paul's father and his entourage remain ignorant of the realities of the war. As such, they still treat it like a giant game. And like all fathers who bust out Risk on family game night, they're totally unaware they are the only ones enjoying the game.

Quote #5

KANTOREK: From the farms they have gone, from the schools, from the factories. They have gone bravely, nobly, ever forward, realizing that there is no other duty now but to save the fatherland. Paul! How are you, Paul?

PAUL: Glad to see you, Professor.

And he's still at it. One of the hallmarks of chauvinism is that it is based on belief, faith, and emotions, not facts and reason. By this time, Kantorek knows the war was not quick, the losses were not few, and the suffering at the Front has been immense. But because his chauvinism was based on a belief of his own country's superiority, no facts will ever change his mind.

Quote #6

TJADEN: He got homesick. You remember about the cherry blossoms?

[Paul nods.]

TJADEN: I guess he never got over that. He started out one night to go home and help his wife with the farm. They got him behind the lines and we never heard of him since. He was just homesick but probably they couldn't see it that way.

Earlier, we saw Detering's pain at being away from his farm and his wife. He simply wanted to return to them, and anyone who has ever been homesick can empathize with him. But the military officials don't see the individual's plight, only the plight of the nation and the military. As such, they see the act as desertion, and it is strongly implied the punishment will be execution.