How we cite our quotes: Citations follow this format: (Chapter.Paragraph)
Quote #10
There was the briefest, softest tsst! filtering audibly through the shattering overwhelming howl of the plane's engines, and then there were just Kid Sampson's two pale, skinny legs, still joined by strings somehow at the bloody truncated hips, sanding stock-still on the raft for what seemed a full minute or two before they toppled over backward into the water finally with a faint, echoing splash and turned completely upside down so that only the grotesque toes and the plaster-white soles of Kid Sampson's feet remained in view. (30.34)
In the moment of death, time seems to stop. Heller goes to great lengths to describe Kid Sampson's grisly appearance. This long stretch of text takes time for us to read, giving the impression of time standing still as Kid Sampson hangs dying in the air.
Quote #11
The gnarled and stunted tree trunks creaked and groaned and forced Yossarian's thoughts each morning […] back on Kid Sampson's skinny legs bloating and decaying, as systematically as a ticking clock, in the icy rain and wet sand all through the blind, cold, gusty October nights. After Kid Sampson's legs, he would think of pitiful, whimpering Snowden freezing to death in the rear section of the plane, holding his eternal immutable secret concealed inside his quilted, armor-plate flak suit until Yossarian had finished sterilizing and bandaging the wrong wound on his leg, and then spilling it out suddenly all over the floor. At night when he was trying to sleep, Yossarian would call the roll of all the men, women and children he had ever known who were now dead. He tried to remember all the soldiers, and he resurrected images of all the elderly people he had known when a child – all the aunts, uncles, parents and grandparents, his own and everyone else's, and all the pathetic, deluded shopkeepers who opened their small, dusty stores at dawn and worked in them foolishly until midnight. They were all dead, too. The number of dead people just seemed to increase. And the Germans were still fighting. Death was irreversible, he suspected, and he began to think he was going to lose. (32.2)
Yossarian's thoughts become obsessed with death. His sees everyone's lives winding down to the tick tock of a clock, marching towards death. He concentrates on the inevitability and universality of death; no one can escape it.
Quote #12
[…] his [the chaplain's] mouth gaped open slowly in unbearable horror as he noted Yossarian's vivid, beaten, grimy look of deep, drugged despair. He understood at once, recoiling in pain from the realization and shaking his head with a protesting and imploring grimace, that Nately was dead. The knowledge struck him with a numbing shock. A sob broke from him. The blood drained from his legs, and he thought he was going to drop. Nately was dead. (36.3)
The death of a friend moves the chaplain to tears. His grief is so strong that it manifests itself physically – numbing his senses and making him collapse.