...Poems for literature The Dead-Beat/ Worn-out/ He dropped, - more sullenly than wearily, Lay stupid like a cod, heavy like meat, And none of us could kick him to his feet; Just blinked at my revolver, blearily; - Didn't appear to know a war was on, Or see the blasted trench at which he stared. "I'll do 'em in," he whined, "If this hand's spared, I'll murder them, I will." A low voice said, "It's Blighty, p'raps, he sees; his pluck's all gone, Dreaming of all the valiant, that AREN'T dead: Bold uncles, smiling ministerially; Maybe his brave young wife, getting her fun In some new home, improved materially. It's not these stiffs have crazed him; nor the Hun." We sent him down at last, out of the way. Unwounded; - stout lad, too, before that strafe. Malingering? Stretcher-bearers winked, "Not half!" Next day I heard the Doc.'s well-whiskied laugh: "That scum you sent last night soon died. Hooray!" The Send-off Down the close, darkening lanes they sang their way To the siding-shed, And lined the train with faces grimly gay. Their breasts were stuck all white with wreath and spray As men's are, dead. Dull porters watched them, and a casual tramp Stood staring hard, Sorry to miss them from the upland camp. Then, unmoved, signals nodded, and a lamp Winked to the guard. So secretly, like wrongs hushed-up, they went. They were not ours: We never heard to which front these were sent. Nor there if they yet mock what women...
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...Wilfred Owen wrote his poems as an attempt to stop the war and to make people realise how horrific it was. In a thorough examination of the poems "Anthem for Doomed Youth", "Dulce et Decorum Est" and "Disabled" and also with some reference to other works by Owen, it can be seen that he uses different poetical features, styles and methods. Wilfred Owen addresses his readers from different stances right up to him addressing the reader personally. This method is very effective in evoking feelings from great anger and bitterness to terrible sadness and even sarcasm, making the reader sometimes even feel guilty. Whichever way he chooses to portray the pity of the war the end result is always the same. "Dulce Et Decorum Est" is a direct attack at the people in Britain who had been taken in by the propaganda drive by telling them the truth of what life is really like at the front and in what conditions their sons, fathers, brothers etc. are in. "Dulce Et Decorum Est" consists of four unequal stanzas, the first two in sonnet form, and the last two in a looser structure. The first stanza sets the scene of soldiers limping back from the front. The authorial stance is of Owen telling us of his own personal experiences. The second stanza focuses on one man who could not get his gas mask on in time. This is a recurring nightmare that Owen has, where he sees one man "drown" in the gas and in the third stanza he describes how the man "plunges" at Owen, "guttering, choking, drowning." This...
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...Imagery, Metaphors, and Diction in Dulce et Decorum Est All exceptional poetry displays a good use of figurative language, imagery, and diction. Wilfred Owen's "Dulce et Decorum Est" is a powerful antiwar poem which takes place on a battlefield during World War I. Through dramatic use of imagery, metaphors, and diction, he clearly states his theme that war is terrible and horrific. The use of compelling figurative language helps to reveal the reality of war. In the first line, "Bent double, like old beggars under sacks,"(1) shows us that the troops are so tired that they can be compared to old beggars. Another great use of simile, "His hanging face, like a devil's sick of sin,"(20) suggests that his face is probably covered with blood which is the colour symbolizing the devil. A very powerful metaphor is the comparison of painful experiences of the troops to "[v]ile, incurable sores on innocent tongues."(24) This metaphor emphasizes that the troops will never forget these horrific experiences. As you can see, Owen has used figurative language so effectively that the reader gets drawn into the poem. The images drawn in this poem are so graphic that it could make readers feel sick. For example, in these lines: "If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood/ Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs/ Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud,"(21-23) shows us that so many men were brutally killed during this war. Also, when the gas bomb was dropped, "[s]omeone still yelling...
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...perspectives from historical figures featured within Regeneration. Birdsong emotively persuades readers that individual anguish has detrimental effects on soldier’s lives intensifying their suffering. The texts use third person narrative to create emotive circumstances which manipulate the reader into understanding the suffering as either mass or individual. The writers’ portrayal of individual suffering was the most poignant compared to the subversion of widespread suffering. The texts expose the stigmatization of physical disability as a cause of individual suffering. Historically, the dependence of disabled life reflects the burden faced by soldiers of returning to normality. Wilfred Owen’s poem Disabled explores the first-hand impacts and consequences of war, coupled with the persistent individual suffering. Owen became infamous during the war as his poetry extracted the distorted views of the home-front and revealed reality. The metaphor, “put them to bed”[2] symbolizes the individual suffering caused by dependence, and also the neglect caused through others’ ignorance to their needs. The dependence of...
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...Wilfred Owen Task 1: The Next War The author portrays Death as a personified character who does not cause the soldiers fear or grief. Although death has come in many forms the soldier has accepted that it is everywhere and has become unaffected by it. This is emphasised in the epigraph in the first stanza and further supported in the first line of the second stanza “we’ve walked quite friendly up to Death, sat down and eaten with him, cool and bland”. This highlights the soldier’s acceptance of death and war and how they relate. The soldier has ‘leagued with him’ and so the soldiers laugh as they have killed just like Death has. Anthem for Doomed Youth This poem draws an analogy between the death of the soldiers and a traditional funeral. It is ironically titled an ‘anthem’ which is usually praiseful or celebratory. The author makes a direct comparison between the ‘choirs’ and the wailing of Shells, and prayers to the rapid sounds of machine guns and rifles. The opening line the soldiers are referred to as cattle, which emphasize how insignificant each live is in the war scene. There are no prayers or choirs mourning for the soldiers who are slaughtered on the battlefield. It is only in the last few lines that the author portrays the silent grieving of the families and loved ones at home. The mood of the poem changes as the author then contrasts the emotion felt back home compared to the ‘cattle’ like death of the soldiers who are around other men whose death...
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...Why is imagery so important in Wilfred Owen’s Poem? The statement Dulce et Decorum est pro patria mori, means “it is good and fitting to die for one’s country”. Wilfred Owen is arguing against this statement through his poem. Imagery is important for this because it helps portray to the reader or “the friend” the horror of war. The soldiers of the poem are described as “boys” not men, they are not described as heroic, they instead are described as “bent double, like old beggars under sacks”, and as ill, “knock kneed, coughing, marching asleep”. Normally soldiers are displayed as inspirational, as strong, Wilfred’s imagery goes against this. He uses metaphor to convey this using “drunk with fatigue”, invoking a strong image of them exhausted and weak. When the gas actually comes the soldiers do not react with training, but instead are described as fumbling, and just putting their helmets on just in time. The earlier imagery of exhausted and overworked soldiers shows how they are not prepared for the gas, or any danger of war, therefore they are likely to die. This again highlights that they are they’re not the soldiers that the Latin phrase refers to, strong and heading to worthy deaths, they are weak, and ill prepared for death, and their health is not valued, they are there to fight and die. The use of gas instead of conventional or seen enemies, shows the reader the faceless nature or mechanism of death in war. Death can come from anywhere, and it does in the poem, when the...
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...Even though "these men are worth/ Your tears" (Owen, "Apologia Pro" 35-36) relatives of the soldiers fail to acknowledge the hell in which "we fight" (Sassoon 7) and the horrid places "we're killed" (8) by euphemistically referring to death in action as "retir[ing]" (9). Similarly, national governments do not know how to appropriately memorialise the souls of the deceased as they immortalise their dead through trivial "decorations" (Sassoon 3) which only pay homage to their actions during WWI and not their personalities...
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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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...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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...and inspiration for some of the greatest works of art. Wilfred Owens would use his experience on the battlefield to capture the purest, most untainted image of war in his literary work. His ability to let the moment speak for itself, letting the vivid imagery represent the war and not adding anything to change what happened, would be the catalyst for what makes Owens the greatest war poet. However, greatness always has a beginning, born on March 18, 1893 in Oswestry, England, Wilfred Owen would go on to be educated at Birkenhead institute and would enroll in the University of London. According to the encyclopedia of Britannica, “after an illness in 1913 he lived in France. He had already begun to write and, while working as a tutor near Bordeaux, was preparing a book of “Minor Poems—in Minor Keys—by a Minor”. In 1915 he would enlist in the British army to serve for his country of origin. The warfare of The Great War would swiftly affect the young soldier. Seeing the various methods of countries’ inhumane slaughter of others led to Owens choice to document the war and its effects. These experiences are forever etched in history because of his literary work that survived the Great War. Sadly his work is the only piece of him that survived as he would be killed...
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...Dolce Et Decorum Et THEMES: • The young betrayal of older people • The sacrifices in which they had to make • The pity of the war Anthem for Doomed Youth THEMES: • Sonnet – ironic • Betrayal of these people • Loss of lives • Funeral ceremonies being denied of these people • There is not glory at war – these people die at war • Lies are being told to them TECHNIQUES: • Rhetorical question at the start of the stanzas which engage the readers to take into account what is denied of these solders • Onomatopoeia – “stuttering riffles rapid rattle”: staccato rhyme mimics the sounds in a battle field, “shrill demented choirs of wailing shells”: talking about how the norm has been upended and there is nothing glorious about the war – it is filled with only horror and pity • Personification – “only the monstrous anger of the guns”: personifying guns as they are raised as the forces of destruction and this highlights the waste of life • Repetition – “only”: stressing that this is all they have which also shows the way in which they die • Sound imagery – “and bugles calling for them form sad shires” • Alliteration – “shall shin the holy glimmers of goodbyes • Rhyming couplet – “mind” and “blinds” • Assonance: the repetition of vows – “doomed youth” Futility AIM: • Poem talking about the absence of god in war MOOD: • Dull, bitter, angry, frustrated • Stresses the bitterness and the frustration the persona who’s man has died • Sadness is shown although some hope...
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...Wilfred Owen essay draft. The First World War rained havoc on the population of Great Britain and Europe between the years 1914 and 1918, causing catastrophe to the soldiers and their families. As well as many other European countries, Britain used propaganda as a tool and to make life on the front line sound more appealing to the average man. Propaganda posters were used to lure people into fight and to make those who decided not to fight appear as cowards among the other men that signed up. The propaganda worked and caused a positive opinion towards men going out to fight; which made more men go out to war and hope to come back as heroes. Many poets wrote about the things that occurred in World War One, such as, Wilfred Edward Salter Owen, who was one of the leading poets of the First World War. Born on the 18th March 1893, Owen was drafted into the army and he fought for Great Britain, which lead to his shocking, realistic war poetry on the horrors of trenches and gas warfare, which are mentioned in poems such as, ‘Dulce et Decorum est’, ‘Futility’ and ‘The Sentry’. His presence in the fighting for his country led him into being able to capture the life of the people on the front line and how it wasn’t glamorous as promoted to be and in reality it was a constant battle to stay alive even when not at front line. In addition to this, poets such as: Jessie Pope also wrote about World War One, Pope never was on the front line like Owen, or even been in a trench. Also...
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...Have YOU ever encountered a situation where there was a thin line between living and dying? Have you ever been the cause for ones death or sacrificed your morals to be a 'hero' for your country? Wilfred Owen was a war poet who enlisted for world war 1 on the 21st of October 1915.During his service Owen was diagnosed with shell shock and sent to Craiglockhart war hospital where he met Siegfried Sassoon whom he was heavily influenced by as both men had interests in expressing their thoughts and feelings of war through their poetry. Wilfred Owen is remembered for his poignant poetry and strong alienation against the support and encouragement of World War 1. War was framed as futile and destructive endangering world people with the result of...
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...Wilfred Owen is Anti-War By Cianan Thomson Silhouetted against the backdrop of his own experiences as a soldier, Wilfred Owen’s anthology “The War Poems” elucidates the brutality of World War 1 and its corrosive effects on those involved. Owen’s acerbic depictions and horrific imagery aim to depict the truth of war and condemn those who romanticised its violent battlefield. Owen’s detestation towards war is emphasised through his description of the suffering and dehumanization of the soldiers. Additionally, he uses his anthology to slander the British government who has sent innocent soldiers to their deaths. Moreover, Owen criticises those who stay at home, unaware of the true horrors and devastations of war. Ultimately, Owen endeavours to expose the true barbarity of the “Great War” and evoke a sense of tragedy in his British readers whom were previously deceived by poets of the day who glorify war and the dying for one’s nation. Owen’s collection of War Poems explores the suffering of the soldiers by likening their treatment to the ruthless handling of livestock. In his poem, “Anthem for Doomed Youth”, Owen illustrates the soldiers as “[those] who die as cattle”. By likening the soldiers to cattle who are slaughtered by the masses, Owen depicts the vast casualties of war and the little mercy they receive for their death. Owen’s animal-related simile effectively dehumanises the soldiers, portraying their lives as valueless in the context of war. The soldier’s anonymity...
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...Wilfred Owen and Rupert Brooke both share the similar themes within their poems, which are war and death. Although there is unconformity within their views due to their backgrounds and experiences. Brooke was very idealistic, which makes sense when he never actually got to fight in the war as he died shortly before where as Owen went through the genuine experience. Two poems that highlight these two contrasts are ‘The Solider’ and ‘Dulce et Decorum est’. In ‘The Solider’, Rupert Brooke illustrates how a soldier is reflecting on the possible death going away to war may bring. Although from his opinion his death if so was to happen shouldn’t be mourned and his death will be a tribute to his England. When compared to Wilfred Owen’s ‘Dulce et Decorum est’ the views are far from similar. Brooke states dying for your country is honourable where as Owen interprets dying for your country is not all glory and honour and more pain and suffering. Both poets desire different forms to present their poems. ‘The Solider’ is a sonnet which suits Brookes type of poems as he romantises the theme of war ‘The Solider’ is very much as well a love poem to his idealized England. Where as Owen opts for the more simple 8. 8. 11, Owen doesn’t seem to have a solid form as Brookes does. They both share the rhyming pattern of ABABCDCD which allow their poems to flow and create rhythm. The structure ‘Dulce et Decorum est’ can be broken down into three parts, an outsiders description and recollection...
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