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“I believe we should get the war over,” I said. “It would not finish it if one side stopped fighting. It would only be worse if we stopped fighting.” “It could not be worse,” Passini said respectfully. “There is nothing worse than war.” “Defeat is worse.” “I do not believe it,” Passini said still respectfully. “What is defeat? You go home.” “They come after you. They take your home. They take your sisters.” “I don’t believe it,” Passini said. “They can’t do that to everybody. Let everybody defend his home. Let them keep their sisters in the house.” “They hang you. They come and make you be a soldier again. Not in the auto-ambulance, in the infantry.” What does Hemingway’s indirect characterization of the narrator reveal? The narrator agrees with Passini, although he does not admit this. The narrator recognizes that war is cruel, unjust, and inescapable. The narrator has little patience for opposing reasoning. The narrator tends to patronize those who disagree with him.

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Based from the excerpt, Hemingway’s indirect characterization of the narrator reveal that 'The narrator recognizes that war is cruel, unjust, and inescapable.' This is relayed by the narrator when he convinces Passini to get the war over and make everybody defend their own homes instead, if necessary. 

Answer: B) The narrator recognizes that war is cruel, unjust, and inescapable.

Explanation: In the given excerpt we can see that the narrator recognizes that war is cruel, unjust, and inescapable, he thinks that if someone tries to escape war, it will follow him/her home and affect all their relationships, and that there is no actual escape from war, we can see this expressed in the lines: "They come after you. They take your home. They take your sisters" and "They hang you. They come and make you be a soldier again. Not in the auto-ambulance, in the infantry.”