...I have chosen this text type, because it gives reasons why Wilfred Owen had a strong opinion on the first world war. My purpose of this text is to show the connections of Wilfred Owen's life to his poem ‘Dulce et Decorum Est’. I am going to communicate my ideas in this text by analysing Owen's life and his poem supporting my ideas with evidence out of Owen's poetry. I intend to engage my audience by showing them what the purpose of Owen's poetry was. Wilfred Owen does have a strong opinion on the topic World War One as he has experienced the war situation as a soldier in front row. His personal war experience had a big influence on his style, language and also the topics of his poetry. His past as a soldier in front row makes his writing style more...
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...leaving us with his great literary work, becoming an influential poet and providing some of the best war poems to the masses. Wilfred Owens style plays an instrumental part in what makes him a great poet. The most accurate way I can describe Owen’s writing is that he lends you his senses and allows the moment to speak for itself. He lets the factual account he paints in vivid imagery to evoke the response he intends from his audience. Dulce et Decorum est, one of his widely known poems, details the death of a fellow soldier at the hands of chemical warfare. The vivid detail he gives is written poetically describing the drowning of this soldier in the sea of mustard gas. It's imagery that needs no explanation and Owens knows that. He offers only his eyes and ears, giving the readers the facts of the situation. This allows the raw emotions of the moment to speak for themselves leaving the reader with an untainted version of the event. Another example of his choice to let the war speak for itself is when describing the conditions in the first stanza of Dulce et Decorum Est. “Bent double, like old beggars under sacks, Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge, Till on the haunting flares we turned our backs, And towards our distant rest began to trudge. Men marched asleep. Many had lost their boots, But limped on, blood-shod. All went lame; all blind; Drunk with fatigue; deaf even to the hoots Of gas-shells dropping softly behind.” He gives imagery...
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...l Wilfred Owens poetry Essay How are Wilfred Owen’s main themes and concerns conveyed through his poetry? Refer to two poems to support your response. Wilfred Owen was a soldier who wrote poems to raise awareness of the reality of war into the public consciousness. Having experienced the harsh impacts of war in first person Wilfred wished to create a negative perception of war “my subject is war and the pity of war”, “the poetry is the pity”. His purpose was to inform, awaken & enlighten the audience about the brutality of war. The focus about the horror of death in war is continued in Owen’s poem “Anthem for Doomed Youth” but it is in a more somber tone, and he shows us a sadder more pitiful image of death in the trenches, compared to Dulce ET Decorum Est.’s pure fury. Anthem for Doomed youth is a sonnet, structured into an octave and a sestet. This divides the poem into its core themes. The first stanza shows a tone of misery & horror which then shifts into a tone of compassion and sympathy in the second stanza. This tonal shift also highlights the different contexts of funerals, one at battle, with no grieving or rituals and one at home, with mourning and respect. Anthem for doomed youth is a poem that attempts to recreate the dehumanizing, wasteful deaths of war in an attempt to shock the audience. Owen explores the reactions of those at home and has genuine sympathy for their grief and helplessness. The lost...
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...Poem Analysis In the poem “ Dulce Et Decorum Est” by Wilfred Owen illustrated many form of suffering that could be found World War I. It is easily understood since, World War I involved a tragic war situation and the poem also has a very exclusive sound to it. A lot of supreme use of imagery, metaphors, and diction, he clearly shows that war is terrible and horrific. The poem takes place on a cold day outside. The poem is telling you about the hard ships that the soldiers went through. The poet is displaying the pain into the readers face. The pain of this piece is the main ingredient. This is something that poet saw and experienced which created serious atmosphere for the poem. The truth involved in it is what makes the poem so powerful. It is written truthfully and from the heart using numerous metaphors and similes as well as other poetical delivery and methods. The tone of the poem seems to be very agile and harsh. A metaphor is the comparison of two unlike things (Oed). The first metaphor can be found in the first line, "Bent double, like old beggars under sacks"(line 1). Beggars on the street that slouch under sacks are usually curled up and are bent or crooked. This metaphor is comparing the soldier to the beggars and reveals that the soldiers are two times as crooked and bent as the beggars because they are really tired. The next metaphor is "coughing like hags"(line 2)....
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...Explication of “Dulce et Decorum Est” By: Wilfred Owen Dulce et Decorum Est is a poem written by Wilfred Owen that uses powerful imagery to express an important message. A message that war is not glorious and noble and should not be portrayed this way. The speaker is a soldier in the army who describes the true horrors of the war and how young men believed it was an honor to die for your country. The poem is written in a simple regular rhyme scheme. Owen uses graphic imagery to show what the war was like. The similes and metaphors he uses give you a clear picture to describe the ugliness of the war. The tone is very harsh and he speaks very direct. He uses words that will shock you and leave you with a sick feeling. In the first stanza, the first two lines of the poem are, “Bent double, like old beggars under sacks/Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge”. This represents the men bent over carrying their belongings through the mud. They are being compared to as old beggars & hags, (miserable ugly old women). However, these men were young. In the third and forth lines, “Till on the haunting flares we turned our backs/And towards our distant rest began to trudge”, represents the tired soldiers heading back to camp. In the fifth and six lines, “Men marched asleep. Many had lost their boots/But limped on, blood-shod. All went lame; all blind;” this shows how tired the men were as if they were marching in their sleep. Many have lost their boots and...
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...Jeff Liao English 1 H 2 September 2011 Dulce et Decorum Est The poem “Dulce et Decorum Est” let readers visualize the scenes of war, it shows how painful and frighten is to die for your own country. Owen used lots of strong and ugly word like “yelling, stumbling, choking, drowning…etc.” to let the reader illustrate how vile and inhumane it actually is. Owen use “Dulce et Decorum Est” as a title, it is a Latin phrase which means “it is sweet and honorable to die for your country”. It give readers a false sense of the poem, it makes them think that this poem is definitely about a heroic guy did something great in the war, like sacrifice himself for the country. At the end, Owen continues his poem by ending that the title is a lie. In this poem, the speaker describe the scenes in the battlefield, he want the readers to image it. The poem start off with a simile “like old beggars under sacks”, which compare men to beggars. There are tons of imagery in hear, like “From gargling blood to cancer-like sores, we've got it all’, describe that soldier's body breaks down completely. There aren’t too many allusions here, but there is a good one, in line 20 “devil” is always about bad stuff. The poem is rhyme in (ababcdcdefef). In stanza1, the speaker describes that the soldiers are like old beggars, crawling over dead bodies on the ground, tries to get through enemies defense. Until almost the end for the day, the soldiers turn away from the lights and noise, and head back to where...
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...1. Bent double, like old beggars under sacks, Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge, The reader is introduced to the horror of war in the first lines of the poem as Owen depicts the poor physical condition of the men.They are facing huge challenges and that they were not the men that they were at first because they were young men who were highly motivated. We cursed through sludge suggests to us how the soldier are off to war this shows that they are cursed and the word sludge suggests to us that they are off to fight in horrendous conditions. Additionally, at the end it shows us that rather being glories young men they turn into this horrible creature because they are being described as old beggars and hags and it shows that they are old before their time and they have got no control over their lives. They can’t walk properly and this tells us that they are very weak because it clearly shows that they are not prepared for it and that they were just brainwashed to go to war to fight for their country which was sweet and glory. Moreover, the soldiers are coughing like an old sick ugly women and this clearly defines how they are feeling and are compared to weak and old. This simile demonstrates how dirty and unhealthy the soldiers appear. The comparison to ‘old beggars’ Coughing like hags is a simile and they are compared to these old ugly women...
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...A Must Have: Owen’s “Dulce et Decorum Est” Dear Mr. Kennedy, I recently learned that you are getting ready to start your preparations for the next edition of An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and Writing. There will have to be many tough decisions made on selections of literature that should be in the next edition. I would like to offer you a suggestion on a piece that I find very interesting and should be used in the next edition. That is a poem by Wilfred Owen “Dulce et Decorum Est.” I consider myself to be a bit of a war buff, and this poem gives you the feeling that you are there in the trenches with the men. Wilfred Owen is able to give you a first person point of view of war through his poem. Owen uses great visual imagery on what life is like during trench warfare to help you feel like you are there beside him during the horrors of war. I beg of you to include Owen’s “Dulce et Decorum Est” in the next edition! Throughout the poem Owen uses visual imagery to get his message of the horrors of war through. In An Introduction, to Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and Writing you define visual imagery as “Often this experience is a sight . . .” (751). When reading “Dulce et Decorum Est” Owen gives the ability to visualize what is going on constantly throughout the poem. Owen is able to use visual imagery to show you the shape the men are in during the battle and what chaos goes on during a gas attack. Owen also uses visual imagery about the nightmares he deals with after...
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...In the poem “Dulce et Decorum est,” the author Wilfred Owen describes how war is hell. Men are pushed savagely across wildernesses to battle against their greatest fears. During the progressive era of World War I the use of barbaric tools of destruction were used in the midst of the war. Chemical Warfare was introduced and new mechanical demands were developed to destroy men’s hopes of freedom. Men feared each other because of the deeds they would perform to survive. Wilfred Owen transmits in words the emotions that men felt as death rained down upon them. Through Wilfred Owen’s poem, “Dulce et Decorum est,” he argues that men’s ethics had to be destroyed because of the will to conquer and survive, he portrays the logic behind a soldiers’ minds...
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...Contrasting the title, “Dulce et Decorum Est” exhibits nothing honorable or patriotic about war. His writing of an ironic title points to the hypocrisy of citizens who continue to preach war’s nobility (Miller 120). In war, unfortunately, not even the witness claims heroism, but instead “[i]n all [his] dreams before [his] helpless sight, [t]he [dying soldier] plunges at [him](15-16)” (LaBlanc 114). Then, Owen suggests that if you too witnessed these memories, they would “smother” (17) your conscience and convince you of the horrors (LaBlanc 111). Therefore, in World War I, the Germans were not the enemies. The real enemy, even though not even mentioned in the poem, becomes the memory of the “helpless” (17) soldier “choking” (16) which never vanishes (Moran 117). When Owen states “[i]f you could hear” (21) “[i]n some smothering dream” (17), he implies that, ultimately, whether the soldiers experience these scenes in dreams or reality does not matter, the agony remains the same (Miller 120). Not only does the “you” and “my friend” imply the reader, but also it implies his “friend”, Jesse Pope who wrote children's stories contrary to Owen’s opinion (Simcox). By asking citizens to “not tell with such high zest to children ardent for...glory, the old Lie” (25-27), Owen presents his declaration for teachers and recruiters to not recommend enlisting (Miller 120). Through his grotesque phrases and haunting details, Owen forces the reader...
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...Wilfred Owen Poems – Notes Anthem for the doomed youth; The title ‘anthem’ is deliberately ironic for an anthem is usually an extended song of praise and it has religious connotations. However the utterance as an ‘anthem’ emphasises his point there is nothing to celebrate in his subject The assonance and adjective of the word doomed in the title adds to the negative tone of the poem. The ‘youth’ that is doomed completes the tragic implications of the title. Age is doomed by death but the youth it is tragic and brutally cut short. The rhetorical question “what passing-bells for these who die as cattle?” A passing bell is an English custom that a rings on a single note when one of the community has died. It is inhuman as men are slaughtered in war, Owen predicts the circumstances of their death and their humanity is stripped from them and they are “die like cattle” The use of onomatopoeia “the stuttering riffles rattled” and “can patter out their hasty orisons” accentuate that war is brutal and cruel The use of the noun “boy” stresses the youths’ vulnerability The alliteration of the word “s”, “sad shires” softens the tone which causes the reader to feel sympathy and remorse for the people who have died and went war. The last laugh; “the last laugh” stark irony in the title “Oh! Jesus Christ! I’m hit!” exclamation mark emphasizes the ridiculous nature of their struggle The adjective “indeed” stresses the sarcastic tone that Owen is drawing attention to ...
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...War is dishonourable Good afternoon fellow philosophers! Let me tell you about an unpleasant truth often overlooked… There are many evils in this world, but only one of them can be necessary in extreme cases. EVERYONE knows that this necessary evil is WAR. WAR is a part of human nature where people are born with an instinct to disagree, whatever the consequences maybe. War is harsh War is cruel, but if we didn’t have courageous soldiers to fight for our country’s rights the world wouldn’t be the world that we know it to be today. HOWEVER I completely DISAGREE…. If war wasn't in the world to begin with, we as a human race would be a lot better off!!! The world has already faced three World Wars and now facing the added dimension of terrorism and suicide bombers that have taken countless numbers of innocent lives. Yes, the world has seen a lot of war. But has it solved any problems? I firmly speak for the proposition 'War is dishonourable’ It creates more problems than it solves'. Wars have left in their wake only death and destruction. The feelings of hatred, jealousy and greed that cause war still remain. Children have become orphans, entire cities have been destroyed, many have become refugees and large numbers have lost their livelihood and sunk into poverty. These are the legacies of war. Wouldn't people agree with me that war has certainly created more problems than it has solved, you only have to watch the news each night to be reminded of the atrocities that are...
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... In "The Things They Carried", the men carried many physical things but weighing even heavier were the experiences the men were forced were to go through. Tim O'Brien, the author, used many different items and situations in his book to symbolize how the war effected him and the soldiers he fought along side of. In chapter four, On the Rainy River, Tim O'Brien tells us how he runs to a little place outside of Canada and meets an old man who discreetly helps O'Brien make his decision to or not to dodge the draft. This story symbolizes that he is being forced to fight a war he does not believe in. O'Brien says "I was drafted to fight a war I hated," (O'Brien, 39). He tells us that he doesn't believe in the war but yet, he was forced to fight and be apart of it. O'Brien feared being ridiculed if he dodged the war but he also didn't want to be critiqued as a coward for not standing up for what he believed in. "I remember the rage in my stomach," (O'Brien, 40) he says. This quote symbolizes the many things he will have to be forced into and hate while he is at war in Vietnam. Another symbol in the book is the sewage field that one of the soldiers died in. Tim O'Brien's best friend, Kiowa, drowned in the field when the Song Tra Bong River flooded. It symbolizes the war as a whole because the whole war is "shitty." O'Brien felt that the war was pointless. America had no business being there. Too many of our men died for another country. None of the men actually waned to be there...
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...With The Old Breed With the old breed, by E. B. Sledge is an autobiographical account of the battles for Peleliu and Okinawa during World War II. The author, a mortarman with Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines chronicles his journey through the Pacific theater of war and the brutality he observed from both forces while in combat. Eugene Sledge, nicknamed “Sledgehammer”, provides a detailed account of his time in the Pacific, and the incredible conditions through which the Marines fought tooth and nail to take control of the islands considered to be necessary to an Allied victory in the war. With the Old Breed, talks about the mental and the physical challenges that the Marines had to face while fighting a dedicated foe. When the Marines landed in Peleliu, the lack of water that was available and the intense heat had a devastating effect on the fighting force. Marines would struggle to dig any sort of fighting force due to the volcanic rock, and often it resorted to using shell craters or having no protection at all. The lack of supplies meant that during the non-stop combat at the beginning of the battle, Marines had no water to drink in the one hundred degree weather and little food. On Okinawa the conditions were almost the opposite , as far as the terrain was concerned. The ground was a bog of mud and decaying bodies. Rain continuously rotted away equipment and clothing. It became a nightmare transporting supplies due to the liquid surface of the island. In addition...
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...Even as of today, thousands of years since the first war, people still argue on the morality of war. As such a controversial topic, it is destined to be written about, including in the form of poems. This paper will compare the different outlooks society has on wars by comparing two poems, "Dulce et Decorum Est" and " Who's for the Game?". "Dulce et Decorum Est" was written by Wilfred Owen and "Who's for the Game?" was written by Jessie Pope.After reading each poem it is clear that the authors have very different but strong opinions on war. In the poem "Dulce et Decorum Est", it addresses all the negative aspects of war. For example, one phrase is "Many had lost their boots, But limped on, blood-shod.". If a young citizen reads this it will indubitably make them second guess about enlisting in the military. The entirety of the poem is about all the possible injuries, both mental and physical, that can go along with war. Owen then ended the poem stating it is a lie when people say it is right to die for your nation. "Dulce et Decorum Est" is meant to make the reader view war negatively and persuade them to think about all the dangerous injuries that can can result from it....
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