He believed in world revolution and that Italy will be the starting point of it. The Hungarian man said, “But it will go better” (82). The Hungarian man and the author were talking when the author said that the revolution was going very badly. The Hungarian man saying that tells me that he has hope for better tomorrow. His confidence despite the ruthlessness of war, he believes that everything will be alright. He believes in not giving up and always tries to keep going despite the obstacles in his life. He is very brisk and ambitious. I presume the Hungarian man thinks that change will come sooner or later. He escapes the whites in Budapest Hungary to have a better life for himself and tries to expose the government in …show more content…
The character Krebs and the young Hungarian are both young and inexperienced in life outside the war, though they both went to war, they were in opposites of each other. The tone also tells a lot about both stories similarities and differences. The story Soldiers Home Krebs got no ambition, confidence or brisk. Krebs completely gave up and was done with everything in life. He didn’t not want to do much; he didn’t want to work for anything anymore. Krebs was hoping things would just come to him easily, such as the girls in America verses the girls in Germany and France that he would have had to work for. The Hungarian man in the Revolutionist was very ambitious, confident and brisk and wanted to see changes after the war. He did not want life to stay the same, but to be better and not as