The Tragic Consequences
Here's where the story gets properly heartbreaking - sometimes making the "right" choice doesn't lead to a happy ending. When the pilot returns home, his family and community treat him as if he no longer existed.
The poem shifts to show the brutal reality of shame in Japanese wartime culture. His wife never spoke to him again, neighbours ignored him completely, and even his own children gradually learned to pretend "he had never returned." The man who chose life over death ends up experiencing a kind of social death anyway.
The final lines pack an emotional punch: "he must have wondered which had been the better way to die." This suggests the pilot might have suffered more by living as an outcast than if he'd completed his original mission.
Remember: This poem isn't just about one pilot - it explores the conflict between personal conscience and cultural expectations, showing how sometimes there are no truly good choices in war.
The poem connects to other war poetry like "Exposure" in showing how conflict affects individuals on a deeply personal level, not just as grand historical events.