In todays society there are many different styles and strengths of writing. Poems which are short and to the point can be the hardest hitting and the outperform at delivering a message. Dulce et Decorum Est by Wilfred Owen is one such poem which genuinely shocked me. Unusually, the author of this poem was genuinely a soldier in the war.
The main point Owen tries to experience in this poem is the sheer horror of war, which is quite shocking.
In the number one-class honours degree stanza Owen describes the men and the condition they are in and through his address shows that the soldiers deplore the conditions. Owen then moves on to tell us how stock-still in their weak human state the soldiers march on, until the competitor fire gas shells at them. This sudden situation causes the soldiers to in haste put their gas masks on, but one soldier did non put it on in time. Owen tells us the condition the soldier is in, and how, even in the time to come he could not forget the images that it left him with. In the last stanza he tells the readers that if we had seen what he had seen then we would never encourage the next generation to play off in a war.
Owen uses imagery to convey the conditions and feelings experienced during this war.
first base of all I will be looking at metaphor. The first metaphor which I will examine is: Haunting Flares. My first opinion on this was that the flares which the enemy are firing to perch up the battle field are said to be representing the souls of the soldiers fallen comrades. This could also be said to represent the agent the enemy has on their own mortality as the quick-witted flares would light up the battle-field exposing...
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