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After The War Poem Analysis
"All the arms we need are for hugging." Unknown. Writers have used their voices and opinions to
protest war and its effects of their own experiences of the war. Stephen Crane worked as a journalist
during the Spanish–American war and published the poem "War Is Kind" to show how people see
the war, versus what the war was really like. Wilfred Owen wrote the poem "Dulce et Decorum Est",
which means "It is sweet and right to die for your country". Owen fought during World War 1,
where he also passed away. Tim O'Brien served in the Vietnam War and wrote The Things They
Carried, to explain what the soldiers had to go through during this war by carrying heavy materials
and close friends' deaths. Using his personal experiences and difficulties after the war, author Kevin
Powers wrote The Yellow Birds after he returned home from serving in Iraq, explaining what goes
through his mind after the war. Writers use imagery, irony, and structure to protest war. First of all,
in the poem, "Dulce et Decorum Est," author Wilfred Owen uses imagery to protest war. In lines 21
and 22, Owen states "In all my dreams, before my helpless sight, He plunges at me, guttering,
choking, drowning. " This quotation illustrates the image of someone dying during the war, and how
corrupt it was on the author. After Owen states this, he then goes on to explain what they did with
the bodies after someone would die, stating "Behind the wagon that we flung him in," (Line 24), and
"If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood come gargling from the froth–corrupted lungs," (Lines
27–28). By using these words, Owen creates the horrifying image of someone dying, how horrific it
was, and how it was an everyday thing for the other soldiers to go through. In his book, The Yellow
Birds, Kevin Powers uses imagery to protest war by stating what it was like to kill someone during
the war and what it will do to your mind. Lines 4–6 state, "or for that matter killing men and
shooting them in the back and shooting them more times than necessary to actually kill them and it
was like just trying to kill everything you saw sometimes." This quotation explains how gory the
war was and how soldiers kept shooting even if they did not know what they were shooting at
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The Importance Of War In Poems
Good morning class, this morning/ afternoon I will be discussing how war is represented within
society and how text structures and stylistic devices help to emphasise war within poems. I will be
reading and analysing the poems Perhaps by Vera Brittain in 1919 and In Flanders Fields by John
McRae in 1915.
Perhaps and In Flanders Fields are both a Lyric poem and are about the feelings of grief and sorrow
for loved ones lost in war. Perhaps was written by V. Brittain in response to the death of her late
fiancé Roland Aubrey Leighton, who was killed at the age of 20 by a sniper in 1915, only four
months after she had accepted his marriage proposal. In Flanders Fields was written by J.McRae in
response to the death of his friend and fellow soldier Lieutenant Alexis Helmer killed In action on
the 2nd of May 1915. The theme of these poems is loss. This theme is explored through the poet's
use of tone and mood, the poetic techniques used and the social comment the poem makes. Each of
these will be discussed in detail today.
The theme of perhaps is emphasised through the tone and mood of the poem. The moods of the
poem are sadness and grief. This is created through the use of repetition, enjambment and alternate
rhyme. Thought the poem Brittian uses repetition in the form of the words "perhaps" and "although"
to emphasis the fact that although her fiancé has passed, perhaps she will find happens again.
Enjambment followed by a pause is used at the end of the poem in the lines
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Poem Analysis: Vietnam War Poems
1. The speaker at the beginning tells the reader his love for America after God and lastly himself in
the phrase "next to of course god america i". Most of the poem is in quotation marks, probably
because it was from a public speech. This unknown speaker could well have been a politician or a
soldier showing his patriotism and religious belief. It is a poem about patriotism and the war. The
poem starts off with the speaker being someone that is a patriot and feels strongly about America. As
the poem progresses it takes a different approach becoming very sarcastic. In this sarcasm the writer
shows that we are ignoring the negative aspects of the war. Therefore bringing to our attention that
patriotism can manipulate people into doing things they usually wouldn't.
2.The speaker portrays this by reciting and putting together lines from American patriotic songs
such as "My Country Tis of Thee" and the "Star Spangled Banner". Despite starting off by showing
his love for America at first, he then ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The title shows faith, patriotism, and self–importance. The speaker loved America but did not love
her war. He is very straightforward with his poem about how foolish people can be but still glorifies
America. The element of the poem is mostly tone because it depicts sarcasm and even anger largely
in part because of To make the sarcasm of the speaker anymore clearer he begins to exaggerate. The
speaker mentions "heroic happy dead" meaning that "sons" mentioned before are the young soldiers
that went to war and died. To the patriot they're honorable heroes but for the speaker what can be
more beautiful than soldiers running to their death "rushed like lions to the roaring slaughter" a form
of simile showing the bravery of the soldiers. Patriotism can sometimes lead one to do such things
for their country, including dying. The author questions the way patriotism is interpreted. A poem is
trying to oppose the idea of patriotism. It is opposing the idea of blind
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War Takes Over Everything in Walt Whitman’s Poem, Drum Taps
The overall theme in Walt Whitman's "Drum Taps" is about the way war consumes everything and
monopolizes every facet of life; particularly the land the war is fought on. When analyzing the
poem, the first stanza talks about the movement of war from the farms, the second stanza talks about
the progression of war from the farm to the city. In stanza three this journey continues through the
battlefield, through the halls of power and finally into the homes, moving from the public to private
spheres of life. Throughout the entire poem there is an emphasized pulse of drums that beats within
the lines. This pulse of drums resonates throughout the entire poem and prompts me to wonder how
Whitman intended to utilize this mechanism. Furthermore, I want to uncover if the sounds of these
drums is symbolic in some way, and if they are, then I wonder if this symbolism represents a
positive view or negative view on war.
My first interpretation is that these drums represent Whitman's negative perspective on war. I feel
that the use of the pulse of drums throughout the poem acts as a mechanism that Whitman uses in
order to discourage war. I feel that these sounds are symbolic of the dire news at the time that
consisted of the battles. It seems that Whitman is addressing this pulse of drums in attempt to
highlight the effect this war will have on the country. In this poem, I see the clear cry for battle as a
cry by someone who is naïve and does not yet know what the ultimate cost of war
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War Is Kind Poem Analysis
In "War Is Kind", Stephen Crane satirically addresses the death notifications delivered to the family
of the deceased soldier which undermine and romanticize the actual brutality of war and the deaths
of countless soldiers.
Crane illustrates two differing settings of the poem–the homefront and the battlefield–through
purposeful word choice. When describing the homefront where the news of soldiers' deaths are
mournfully delivered, Crane includes euphonious words such as "weep" and "affrighted steed." The
euphony achieved by the long vowel sounds in these words establishes a sense of quietness and
serenity. In addition, the melodious diction emphasizes the gentleness of the death notification, and
imitates the soft, comforting voice of the informer. On the other hand, in the interluding stanzas,
Crane employs harsh, dissonant diction. For example, the second stanza states, "Hoarse, booming
drums of the regiment." When read aloud, the cacophony established by these rhythmic, staccatoed
beats reflects the chaos of the war–almost similar to the rapid sound of fusillade and artillery fire.
Crane also utilizes similar techniques in the fourth stanza when he states that "These men were born
to drill and die." Since the sentence is composed mostly of words beginning with "b" and "d", which
are regarded as plosives, the resulting sentence parallels the thundering explosions on the
battlefront. The contrasting euphony and cacophony each reflect separate connotations–the home–
front stanzas possessing a peaceful setting where death is regarded as heroic sacrifices while the
battlefield stanzas label war as mindless slaughtering. However, the extreme contrast between the
imagery of the two settings raises doubts for the readers, causing them to question if the scenes of
serenity are truly peaceful, or merely mock tranquility.
These doubts of the reader are confirmed by Crane when he reveals the disingenuousness of the
death notification through irony. Crane illustrates this irony between the death notification and the
actual scenes of the war with various forms of juxtaposition. The most blatant contrast is the
imagery between each alternating stanza. As previously stated, the first, third, and fifth stanza
describes a
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Analysis of Bruce Dawe's Anti-War Poem, Homecoming Essay
An anti–war poem inspired by the events of the Vietnam War, Homecoming inspires us to think
about the victims of the war: not only the soldiers who suffered but also the mortuary workers
tagging the bodies and the families of those who died in the fighting. The author, Australian poet
Bruce Dawe, wrote the poem in response to a news article describing how, at Californian Oaklands
Air /Base, at one end of the airport families were farewelling their sons as they left for Vietnam and
at the other end the bodies of dead soldiers were being brought home. Additionally, he wrote in
response to a photograph, publishes in Newsweek, of American tanks (termed 'Grants' in the poem)
piled with the bodies of the dead soldiers as they returned to the ... Show more content on
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These sections allow for a change in emotion as each represents a separate part of the 'homecoming':
Saigon describes the packaging of the bodies and how the soldiers are zipped up in green plastic
bags; the flight represents the travel home, which metaphorically could also be their souls to heaven;
and the third section is the arrival of the bodies in Australia. The use of pronouns gives the first two
sections an emotionless feel as we do not learn specific names or information about the victims.
However, when the scene changes to urban Australia in the final section the emotion changes to
grief and regret for the families. The emotion of the speaker is indicated by signature language, the
poet describing how "telegrams tremble like leaves from a wintering tree" and "small towns where
dogs in the frozen sunset raise muzzles in mute salute". Comparing the telegrams fluttering to the
ground to leaves falling from a tree in winter reinforces our assumption of the tragic news contained
within the telegrams: the "wintering tree" is clearly a metaphor for death and hence we know that
enclosed within the telegrams is notification of the soldiers' demise. Equally moving is the reference
to man's best friend mourning its loss, the poet describing how the dogs respectfully acknowledge
the precious
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Analysis Of The Poem ' War Is Hell '
Sandra Gonzalez
Enix– 7th Hour
War Is Hell
29 September 2014
Insert Title Here Hero. According to Webster's New World Dictionary, a hero is defined as "any
person, male or female, admired for courage, nobility, etc." (Webster's New World Dictionary, "hero
1"). Webster's Pocket Dictionary, comparably, defines a hero as "a person of great courage, spirit,
etc., especially one who has undergone great danger or difficulty" (Webster's Pocket Dictionary,
"hero 3"). Heroes are not born heroes. Yes, everyone is born with the ability to be a hero, but in
time, they may or may not become one. In our society, heroes are greatly acclaimed in the media.
Whenever some person takes a bullet for a loved one or saves a child from a burning building, there
is a huge deal made about it, and they become known as heroes. But a person does not have to
physically save someone's life to be a hero. A hero can also be someone who simply stands up for
what he or she believes. Much like Atticus Finch from To Kill a Mockingbird, a hero can be
someone who knows what is right and does the right thing, even if he is ridiculed for doing so. Also,
whether or not a person is a hero depends on the perspective of the person. For instance, a little girl
may think her father is the greatest man alive, but her first grade classmate does not think so–
instead, she thinks her father is a hero. The daughters of the man who is known for deterring United
Airlines Flight 93 on September 11, 2001 definitely think him a
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Poem Analysis: The Vietnam War
The poem is about the return of our troops and the support we give them. In the poem they are
talking about how it affects the soldiers and their families. They also talk about the public's reaction
and how they just don't understand, because they haven't been where they were. Higher ranked
officials take advantage of the soldiers or young people going into war. The soldiers fight for peace
and don't get it in return.
The return of our troops is a wonderful thing, think about it. How happy would you be to be alive,
but at the same time how much you just wanted to die. The feeling is 50 50. You can come back
with the joy of having your family back but all those dreams, nightmares, loss of dignity for some,
horrible reminders of how many people
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War Photographer Poem Analysis
War Photographer by Carol Ann Duffy is about a photographer who is struggling with the
consequences and reality of war. The voice of criticism from the experience of war combined with
the use of poetic devices exposes the theme of war. The poet uses compelling and distressing
illustrations in this poem to enthrall pathos into the reader's feelings. The use of pathos stirs up
emotions of sympathy, sorrow, and despair. Thus, his photographic films are filled with pictures of
the genuine agony caused by the bloodshed of warfare. The rhyme scheme is laid out in four regular
six–line stanzas, with each stanza ending with a rhyming couplet. It sets the tone to create a
wonderful contrast between the positive and negative prospects of war. As the ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Through the diverse methods of using powerful images, contrasts, references to the locations of
infamous war zones, metaphors, sentence structure, and formatting styles, the readers are able to see
the egregious poem freely. As Carol Ann Duffy discloses the poem, the photographs contain
countless images of hardship and suffering endured by those affected by the war.
The war photographer is described as "a priest" who is ready to intone a mass. The use of
euphemism of the photographer gives the readers a convincing mind of the thoughts and feelings of
the photographer. The word 'priest' suggests that the photographer gets a keen sense of responsibility
and obligation. In this instance, he acts like a messenger showing the suffering societies in war
zones opening other people's eyes for those who don't know about the dangers where war is present.
"He has a job to do." This short sentence highlights how he is required to keep his concentration and
focus on his
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Anti War Poem Homecoming
Disparity of power in society is often created in the chaos of wars, in which it leads to abuse in
power and loss of identity in individuals. Through the anti–war poem Homecoming by Dawe,
responders have discovered and gained an insight on the power of war, which has impacted and led
to the degradation of the 'homecoming' soldiers in 'they're...them', as an anaphora illustrates the
bitter attitude of the persona, merging and exhibiting Dawe's dismissive perspective of war. The
dominance of conflicts has impacted on the soldiers the most as it is denoted in the free verse lines,
reflecting the unstructured senseless tragedy of war that stimulated their powerlessness. On the same
hand, Dawe continues with his critical view of militarism in confronting
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World War Two Poem Annotated
Just by reading the title, we know that this poem is about World War II. The first stanza talks about
high school kids "training for war." Hall is comparing a school sport to fighting in the war which, to
me, is a bit of an exaggeration. You are not very likely to get badly hurt playing a sport and, if you
do, you can usually come back from it fairly well. In war, it is extremely easy to become injured,
and most war injuries can cause you to lose your life. We see an example of this in Stanza II when
Dom dies in battle. During WWII, the military drafted young men to fight in the war. Dom was just
a kid, sent off to fight in the war, and died not even a year after being one of the high schoolers
playing sports. His life had barely started before
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War Is Kind, And The Poem, Anthem For Doomed Youth
Knock, knock, knock on the door; a trembling hand reaches to turn the knob on the door, not
knowing if want lies beyond the door is good news or tragic news about a loved one that is off at
war. Everyday loved ones wait at home waiting for news or their loved one to come home, hopefully
unharmed both physically and mentally, safe from the wrath of war. War and violence can affect
many people directly or indirectly in quite different ways. These effects on people involved with war
and violence can be found in the movie Hacksaw Ridge, the poem "War is Kind," and the poem
"Anthem for Doomed Youth." In the movie Hacksaw it can be found throughout the entire movie the
effects war can have on a family and even on people that are not related to ... Show more content on
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Doss decided from then on to become a conscientious objector and Doss's father quit the abusive
relationship. Doss then left for war a few years later, leaving behind his broken father, his mother,
and his girlfriend whom he was engaged too. Doss found that not everyone agreed with his decision
to not bare arms and Doss was said to be a coward. Doss missed his wedding because he was not
allowed to leave boot camp until he shot a gun and his soon to be wife was left standing on the alter.
Doss was finally cleared to be a medic in the army and was sent to Okinawa to fight on Hacksaw
Ridge. Doss ran through the battlefield saving many men and when the army retreated back off of
the cliff Doss stayed behind. Doss went through battlefield, dodging the Japanese enemies and
lowered over seventy American soldiers along with a few Japanese enemies down to safety. Doss
was soon saw as a hero in the eyes of his squad that had once despised him, and had earned the
Medal of Honor. Doss's bravery throughout the battle of Hacksaw Ridge saved many lives that then
affected the lives of the families of the soldiers he had saved. The movie, Hacksaw Ridge was based
off of the true story of Desmond Doss and Gibson shows how violent and gruesome the Battle of
Hacksaw Ridge really was. Doss is a Seventh Day Adventist, and was full of patriotism but he was
affected by his father 's internal fight that was left over from World War One.
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Poem Analysis: War Photographer
The poem War Photographer narrates the hardships and horrific events, which a war photographer
must face and capture, in a third–person's perspective. It brings to awareness how being surrounded
by media daily has de–sensitized humans and how apathetic and uncaring the rest of the world, who
is not directly affected by the war, is. This poem indicates themes of the effects of war, grief, and
third–world countries.
The poem War Photographer opens in the tranquil setting of the photographer's darkroom or
developing room. He is compared to a priest and it seems like a ritual is taking place. This religious
imagery is effective in conveying the dedication the photographer feels towards his job and how
often the photographer comes face to face with death. There is a suggestion that the darkroom is like
a sanctuary for the photographer, where he can finally be alone. The quote "spools of suffering" tells
us that the amount of horrific photographs seem to be endless. The first stanza ends with the
quotation "all flesh is grass", which reinforces the religious imagery. ... Show more content on
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The phrase "solutions slop in trays" uses onomatopoeia, to include the sense of sound. The
photographer's hands are shaking now, though they did not tremble when taking the photo. This
implicates that in order to do his job on the field, he must distance himself from all emotions.
However, he is able to let down his guard in the privacy of the darkroom as he finally reacts to the
terrible suffering he was forced to witness and capture. He considers the difference between Rural
England and the war zones that he visits, noting how our ordinary problems can be dispelled by the
simplicity of bad weather. The injustice of the situation is represented when he says how our
children don't have to be afraid of landmines, when they are
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Summary Of The Poem After The War Poem
When faced with the countless problems of war including death, disease, sorrow, and loss, soldiers
develop and intense bond between one another as they seek support in one another. A brotherhood is
formed among these soldiers who rely on one another for protection and companionship amid a time
in their lives where they are faced with the constant threat of death and violence everyday of their
lives. But what happens to them after the war? In After the War, poet brings awareness to how the
war–torn soldier attempts to reestablish their self in a society they have been isolated from for so
many years through use of free verse and repetitive phrases, which further reinforces the theme
throughout the poem.
Use of free verse in this poem creates a lack of structure that appears to parallel the soldier's own
lack of structure and direction in his own life after he leaves the war. The poem begins with the
image of a soldier's and his squadron raiding a farmhouse:
When he got to the farmhouse, he rifled through the cabinets, drawers, and cupboards, and his
buddies did too. The place was abandoned, or so he thought, and his buddies did too.
The first stanza connotes a slight sense structure as the phrase " and his buddies did too" is repeated
after stating each action the soldier does. Moreover, the lines themselves are structured in such a
way that suggests a deliberate organized form– especially in comparison to how the rest of the poem
is written. Most interesting about the
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ESSAY ON 3 WAR POEMS
ESSAY ON 3 WAR POEMS
No man wants to go to war and no government wants war but there are many different
circumstances that lead to the action of war. Those involved in war will have political and personal
views towards it. The
First World War was greeted with great enthusiasm and patriotism; however it was the war in which
millions died compared to the wars after. In the past 200 years warfare has changed and with this
change the ideas on war have changed too.
Wilfred Owen, Rudyard Kipling and David Roberts are well known war poets. Using a selection of
their poems we hope to analyze the two conflicting views on war.
To understand what influenced the poets we need to get an idea of their social and historical
background. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He than counteracts these thoughts and statements by saying "Who stands if freedom falls?" and
"Who dies if
England live?" By this I think he means that even if you die during this war you will live on through
England and the freedom of mankind so fight because you have nothing to loose.
If you compare this poem to 'The solider' written by Rupert Brooke in the same year, you will find
that the main view is the same. Both poems try to glorify warfare. I think this is because the poems
were written in the early stages of WW1 before most of the blood was spilled, so both poets took the
opportunity to recruit more soldiers.
Wilfred Owen was a solider in WW1 and battled at the front most of the war; because of this I feel
his view on the war can be trusted.
Wilfred Owens poem 'Dulce Et Decorum Est' Was first published after the war in 1921 even though
it was probably written between the years
1915 and 1918 like his other poems. I think this is because it describes the true horror of warfare so
the generals didn't want it published as it might discourage others from signing up to join the army.
The title of the poem is
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Analysis of the Poem War Photographer
War Photographer by Carol Ann Duffy In his darkroom he is finally alone with spools of suffering
set out in ordered rows. The only light is red and softly glows, as though this were a church and he a
priest preparing to intone a Mass. Belfast. Beirut. Phnom Penh. All flesh is grass. He has a job to do.
Solutions slop in trays beneath his hands which did not tremble then though seem to now. Rural
England. to ordinary pain which simple weather can dispel, to fields which don't explode beneath
the feet of running children in a nightmare heat. Something is happening. A stranger's features
faintly start to twist before his eyes, a half–formed ghost. He remembers the cries of this man's wife,
how he sought approval without words ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It is seen that the photographer's feelings are brought out in two contrasting situations, at home and
while at warfront. The poet continues to describe the sufferings of the photographer when his mental
state is compared as he is travelling between the two contrasting worlds – one the warfront which is
full of destruction and chaos and the other is 'Rural England,' probably countryside that is peaceful
and serene. He compares the pain of war to simple pain of changing weather back at home in
England. There being nothing worse then the harsh weather that the children have to face as against
the mines that explode on the running feet of the children affected by war. This only tells us that the
photographer longs peace and he is deeply moved by the affected children. His prolonged thoughts
are presented with great effect by the use of enjambment in this line and this adds to the effect of
continuity of thoughts. From a realistic tone the poet moves on to a mysterious tone when she opens
this third stanza with 'something is happening.' Probably something unforgettable, frustrating and
unbearable is happening. This is unfolded in the subsequent line, 'half–formed ghost,' it's the body of
a dead soldier which seems to be haunting the photographer who is dead. His conscience is pricking
him for he had to seek the dead soldier' wife's s permission
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Comparing War Poems Essays
Comparing War Poems Died of Wounds and Suicide in the Trenches are two poems, which I will be
comparing the similarities and differences, which were written by the same author. Both these
poems were written by a person called Siegfried Sasson, who wrote most of his poems during the
World War One, which outlined how bad the war was to those at home after suffering from being
Shell Shocked. I will be comparing the language it uses, ideas it contains and the way it is structured
between both poems, which Siegfried Sasson uses to demonstrate that war is evil, and should be
stopped. The theme in Died of Wounds is that soldiers become shell–shocked and go insane. They
also suffer from mental and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
On the forth line of Died of Wounds the author says "He did the business well" where "business" is a
metaphor, for it is the earnest of the wounded solider to draw attention to himself. Also on the last
line of Died of Wounds the author describes dead soldier as a "slight wound" where he is comparing
a dead solider to a small wound, and therefore it does not matter, and he is also comparing the
country to a solider, which is hardly notices a slight wound. There is also some similarity in Suicide
in the Trenches where Siegfried Sasson describes the trenches as if it is like hell meaning that war
was like a place where young people went and got themselves killed. On the first line of Died of
Wounds, Siegfried Sasson wrote "Wet White", which is alliteration, which is a type of sound device.
He also does this on the third line, ninth line and the last line. This makes the poem sound better.
There is also some similarity in Suicide in the Trenches, where the author also uses this device to
make the poem catchier but instead uses different letters to make it sound different and better. There
is also another similarity in both poems where there are no assonances, which is the same as
alliteration but it does not occur in consonants
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War Photographer Poem
How is the theme of war portrayed through imagery in the poems Lament by Gillian Clarke and War
Photographer by Carol Ann Duffy?
Lament is written by Welsh poet Gillian Clarke, which is an elegy where she laments the loss of
lives due to the Gulf War in 1991. Through the use of imagery and figurative language, the theme of
war is portrayed violently and unpleasantly. Similarly, in Carol Ann Duffy's poem War
Photographer, war is depicted through the description of developing photos that the photographer
has taken, in which one of several will be chosen for the Sunday Supplement. This poem not only
uses language and literary devices to reveal the consequences of conflict, but also through tone and
atmosphere reflects the dismissive attitudes ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the opening stanza of War Photographer, references to religion, 'light is red', 'church', 'priest',
'Mass', 'All flesh is grass', are very prominent and symbolic. The photographer is metaphorically
described as a priest preparing to say Mass, with the names of countries in war instead of words of a
service, and with the red light of the darkroom symbolizing the church tabernacle lamp. This
metaphor reminds us of the transience of life, when one death can mean so little. Likewise in
Lament, the repetition of 'For' at the start of each verse brings a chanting–like effect, which reflect
religion and ritualism. The entire poem is almost like a song, a desolate tune of mourning for the lost
lives. In addition, 'pulsing burden', also suggests a rhythmic and regular beat to the poem. This
phrase in itself is a paradox, where pulsing represents energy and liveliness, whereas burden
represents a weight and unpleasantness; it reflects the burden of war on the country, repressing
animals and humans who try to
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Sun Wars Poem
I was just having a normal day when the sun god came to visit us! Well, I guess who we thought was
the sun god. We welcome him and dressed him in religious robes and gave him a cup of our people's
blood, but he went all crazy. Him and others started blasting us with booms and loud noises. They
left and later sent a message of peace. We didn't know if we could trust them because they allied
with our enemy, but we decided to leave it. We met again and offered them gold, hoping to make
them leave. They didn't leave! We met and made peace. We welcomed them like honored guests and
let them stay in one of our palaces. That was a mistake. The leader of the white men, Hernan, put
our king under arrest! Then, there was a formal transfer of power! Oh
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The Different Aspects of Conflict in a Selection of Four...
The Different Aspects of Conflict in a Selection of Four War Poems
Many poems have been witnessed throughout history that show different views on war and the glory
and sacrifices made. Everyone was affected, from the men in the front lines to women and children
working back at home. Men involved in the war effort often wrote poems to record their thoughts
and feelings, or simply to pass the time. Poetry was an outlet through which they could express great
depth of meaning by condensing it into a few words. In this assignment I am going to write about
the war poems entitled 'The Charge of the Light Brigade', a poem written in 1854 by Lord Alfred
Tennyson, 'Dulce et Decorum est', a poem ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
England is personified as being a mother. Brooke's message in this poem is that if he should die, the
place of his death will be made richer by his body. The body will carry these English blessings,
passing them onto the ground on which it lies. Brooke writes his own epigraph and shows a moving
sense of the poet's deep love of England and it's people. The poet feels he can influence the thoughts
of those left behind, with this he will try to cement the continuation of those qualities that he thinks
of as being essentially English. Brooke has transformed the poem into a sonnet, not addressed to a
loved one but to his country.
In this poem the moods of the first few months of the war are summed up. Despite the subject matter
there is a sort of serenity in the poem, even the words 'If I should die' suggests that he expects to
survive.
The reality of the horror had still to be discovered.
This poem mirrors the sentiments expressed in " The Charge of the Light Brigade ". This event took
place in 1854 and is still remembered as one of the most famous triumphs in British history. The
truth is that Lord Cardigan suicidally led his troops " Into
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War Is No Poem Analysis
"When human beings live together, conflict is inevitable. War is not." Oodles of poems explore
different aspects of the violent theme of conflict. Carol Ann Duffy's 'War Photographer,' Chinua
Achebe's 'A Mother in a Refugee Camp' and Louis MacNeice's 'Prayer Before Birth' portray conflict
through the disasters of warfare. In an akin way, the poem 'Disabled' by Wilfred Owen displays a
youngster whose limbs were lost in the battlefield and is now waiting for death. 'Piano' by D. H.
Lawrence is another poem which depicts a man's reminiscence of his mother, who might've died due
to some form of conflict. Similar to 'A Mother In A Refugee Camp' is W. H. Auden's 'Refugee
Blues,' both successfully displaying the arduous lives of refugees. Therefore, I will be analyzing the
theme of conflict as well as comparing the above mentioned poems in this essay. Firstly, what is
conflict? Conflict is a form of disagreement or argument, usually a protracted one. Most of the
times, conflict between people leads to a prolonged dispute, violence and even a clash: known as a
war. War is generally the main outcome of conflict; and is quite a disastrous, disgusting and dreadful
one. The catastrophic effects of war on people's lives are evident in the poems that I am comparing.
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It is clearly shown in the first line: "In his darkroom he is finally alone." The quote also informs the
audience that the poet has returned there to develop photographs after a long, horrifying trip abroad.
The darkroom serves as the metaphor for the photographer's depression. It might also signify the
way humans purposely hide from unpleasant truths. Whereas 'A Mother In A Refugee Camp' is,
quite straightforwardly, set in a refugee camp. However, the setting of 'Prayer Before Birth' is rather
different as there is no set place. The poem is a plea from an unborn child to a divine power, so the
setting might be in the womb of the foetus'
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Analysis Of The Poem ' War Photographer ' By Carol Ann Duffy
Poetry is a way of confronting experiences and the issues it raises for the living. Death is rife during
global conflicts and some poets use their craft to show the pain and suffering aspects of death. 'War
Photographer' by Carol Ann Duffy presents people's death through both literal and figurative lexis. It
uses the metaphorical lens of a camera to create an opinion about war and the role of media is
reporting it humanely. 'A Mother in a Refugee Camp' by Chinua Achebe presents the suffering and
torment of death with strong sensory imagery to reflect the horrible and inevitable events levied on
innocent victims. 'Vultures', also by Chinua Achebe presents death by contrasting cruelty and love in
the Second World War and obliquely, the Nigerian civil war. Death also befalls every individual in
an inevitable manner and grief is just as intolerable when someone you love is taken from you.
'Remember' by Christina Rossetti is bittersweet; whilst embracing death, she rejects death as she is
torn between her lover remembering her, or forgetting her as remembering would be too painful for
him. 'Mid–term break' by Seamus Heaney is a first hand account of his painful early experience of
his family tragedy and 'Funeral blues' by W.H Auden, consist of an unnamed speaker lamenting the
death of someone close to him. 'War Photographer' by Carol Ann Duffy is a powerful and poignant
poem that dichotomizes two worlds. It addresses the hardships of war through the eyes of an
individual and
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War Poem Comparison Essay
Gavin Ross Pre–Entry Access Class – English Module Tutors – Aimee McNair and Kevin Wilson Q.
In an essay of not more than 1,500 words compare and contrast ONE PAIR of the two pairs of
poems printed below. Your answer should exhibiy a clear understanding of each poem's meaning
and tone, and you should consider the effect and importance of formal features, such as rhyme
scheme, sound patterning, word choice, figurative language and punctuation. Date handed in : 31st
January 2011 This essay will compare the poems "On Passing the New Menin Gate" by Siegfried
Sassoon (1927) and "Anthem For Doomed Youth" by Wilfred Owen (1917) and decipher whether
there are any contrasts of worthwhile note. It will explore the meanings of ... Show more content on
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Sassoon and Owen's rhetorical style help connect the reader to the events being described and
communicate successfully their feelings of anguish about the war. Sassoon and Owen further
communicate their contempt for the war and its unforgiving treatment of the soldiers through the use
of alliteration. Sassoon says, "Paid, with a pile of peace–complacent stone" (line 7). The sarcastic
use of "Paid" suggests Sassoon does not believe the Menin Gate to be a worthwhile reward. The
personification of the monument when Sassoon says, "peace–complacent stone" (line 7) creates the
idea that the monument has an unjustified feeling of self–worth and importance and stands
arrogantly, believing itself to be a comparable reward to the loss of life and misery endured by
thousands of soldiers and families. The repetition of the letter "p" makes it sound as though Sassoon
is spitting his words out in a bitter and degrading manner and is effective in demonstrating his anger
about the perceived ignorance displayed by the memorial (Internet 10). Owen also achieves an
emphatic effect when he uses alliteration in "Anthem For Doomed Youth" when he says, "Only the
stuttering rifles' rapid rattle" (line 3). This harsh sounding repetition of the letter "r" is used for the
purpose of sound imagery to help convey the horrors of
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The Next War Poem Analysis
In Wilfred Owen's war poetry, the distinctive idea criticised all through all his poetry are the ideas of
the horrors, brutality and waste of war and the hypocrisy and lies held by many back homes. This
idea is developed a significant amount in two of his poems, "Dulce et Decorum Est" and "The Next
War" through the shocking images Owen creates. With both poems being written in first person
plural, Owen invites us into his poem which allows his idea to be properly conveyed to his audience
and his desired outcome, to make the people back home realise the terror of war and complete lack
of glory, to be reached.
In "Dulce et Decorum Est", Wilfred Owen boldly criticises the way civilians mislead and
manipulated the unknowing soldiers previous to and during World War I and explores the horrors of
war. Owen invites us into his poem by asking us to "watch" the scenes of men with "white eyes
writhing" he is retelling to make the reader feel what he is feeling, that the war is a waste. He speaks
of events he witnessed and the "boys" reactions to events seen through the simile of "coughing like
hags". In the final stanza of the poem, Owen speaks reflectively of the terrifying scenes of men with
"incurable sores" he was witness to and at times experienced and from gaining the compassion of
the reader through his descriptive language, "limped on, blood–shod".
Owen delivers his idea on the war in a shocking way which allows us to see his angry and bitter
views on it. As Owen describes
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War Poems
War is a time of violence, protest, death and pain for many people around the world. With this
conflict, a lot of poetry is written because poetry is one of the most common ways for people to put
across their feelings about situations. War is one of these situations for which many people have
very strong feelings.
A common theme in war poetry is the transformation that war brings about in a person. Many poems
reveal boys going into war and becoming young men after the experience. Another dominant theme
in war poems is about the forgotten soldiers who lost their lives and weren't remembered.
Many poems have been written about war and the feelings evoked by war. Even though a lot of war
poetry was written before World War 1, the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
However Gibson uses his words well and there are some smart lines throughout the poem. The
rhyming is very simple and the final word in each line rhymes with the other final word in each
two–lined stanza. The simple nature of the rhythm in the poem gives it a gentle flow which is very
appropriate for the subject matter.
The poet's ability to use basic words, structure and rhythm appropriately enables him to create a
smart and crisp poem. The simplicity of the poem allows the readers to recognize the serious
subject–matter of the poem, which is war.
This next poem was written by me. I got the inspiration for this poem after reading a number of
other war poems and remembering all the people who lost their lives at war. It is called "Young lives
lost"
The eerie night was torn
By the blistering light of dawn
Many soldiers, many very young,
Their first time holding a gun.
Some no more than 16 years
Bravely holding back the burning tears
Youth's ignorance had been lost
The line of no return was crossed
War had turned these boys to men
Many would never see home again
And unless the senseless killing is ceased
The departed souls will never rest in peace.
My poem is written in a similar style to Gibsons' poem. I followed the same rhyming patterns, and
used a simple structure, however my poem uses some slightly more complicated words. The general
theme is the same, but
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Comparing the Attitudes Demonstrated between Pre-War and...
Comparing the Attitudes Demonstrated between Pre–War and at War with Brooke's Poem The
Soldier and Owen's Poem Dulce et Decorum est Dulce et Decorum Est was written at war in 1917
by an English poet and World War I soldier Wilfred Owen. Dulce et decorum est is written in a very
bitter manner, by a man who had very strong anti–war sentiments. The 27–line poem, written
loosely in iambic pentameter is told from the eyes of Wilfred Owen. The opening line of this poem
contains two similes which compares the soldiers to beggars and hags 'bent double, like old beggars
under sacks', 'coughing like hags.' This is not how we would portray young, fit, soldiers, but the fact
of the matter is that they are no ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Owen uses the word boys which reminds us of their youth, but having already described them as
aged and disabled we come to the fact that their youth was stolen, and we are also confronted with
the concept that they are innocent victims within the war. "But someone still was yelling out and
stumbling" this is the line where Owen begins his vivid description of a gas attack death. It is
introducing us to the situation this soldier is in from a third person view. The next line; "And
flound'ring like a man in fire of lime" describes the helplessness of this poor soldier who is about to
die. The image of the man "guttering, choking, drowning" permeates Owen's thoughts and dreams,
forcing him to live this grotesque nightmare over and over again. The word 'Dim' in the next line has
a lot of significance and meaning. Firstly it describes the scene, the light, giving it an eerie and
gloomy feel, one with little hope. Secondly, it describes the chances this soldier has, having shown
us that war can be left up to chance, Owen is describing the chances this boy now has for survival. 'I
saw him drowning', shows that Owen directly refers to himself. This is to personify the entire poem,
to make it much more real to the reader. It is showing us that all the horrors Owen has described are
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Poem Fact Sheet: The Vietnam War
VIETNAM FACT SHEET
The Vietnam war was a long ,costly armed conflict that pitted the communist regime of North
Vietnam and its Southern allies,known as the viet cong, against south Vietnam and its principal
ally,the United States. It ended with the withdrawal of the U.S. forces in 1973 and the unification of
Vietnam under communist control two years later.However it was indeed one of the bloodiest wars
and more than 3 million people including 58,000 Americans were killed during the conflict.
Ted offensive: was a series of major attacks by communist forces in the vietnam war. Early in
1968,Vietnamese communist troops seized and briefly held some major cities at the time.During
january 1968 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
When young men denied the right to vote were conscripted to fight for their country. While this
right was still in the air many people like president Dwight Eisenhower mentioned how this right
should be passed.He thought that if this men that go to war and risk their lives with the war . that
they are old enough to go to war then they should be old enough to vote.
The role of media: Vietnam was a very well known place in the media,because of the whole war
between the united states and north vietnam it made the media notes all the thing that
happened.Although many were killed because of the war, many other were also staying in saigon to
be safe. This war was really know for being the first war to make it to the television as the first
television war.
The credibility gap: Is a term that came into wide use with journalism,political and public discourse
in the united states during the 1960s and 1970s. The credibility gap happened because of president
Johnson lack of communication of what happened with the united states involving itself in the
vietnam war. He was so into wanting to stop the war into increasing and communist spreading. That
he wouldn't communicate with the people and they wouldn't be informed well so they would start
wondering.however the medial also had a huge impact on this because of videos and picture out
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Essay Comparison of Three First World War Poems
Comparison of Three First World War Poems
The three poems that I will be studying in this essay are "Dulce Et Decorum Est" by Wilfred Owen,
"Comrades: An Episode" by Robert Nichols and "Who's For The Game?" by Jessie Pope. These
poems are about the First World War and two of them seem to have a negative attitude criticising
and downgrading the so–called spectacular experience of the First World War. In "Dulce Et
Decorum Est" Wilfred Owen seems to mention good aspects of the War but compares them to low–
class tragic events. In "Comrades: An Episode" Robert Nichols describes the event of a soldier being
badly injured and eventually dying. It describes what the corporals and soldiers did and how ...
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In the second poem, "Comrades: An Episode" the same picture comes to mind by using different
techniques. The poem is written in the style of a story, which gives the writer more opportunity to
include descriptions and details. In this poem the narrator is the leader of a group of men and he
mentions names and, as he knows his men so well, he can create and describe vivid pictures of
them, such as "Not to see them: Wilkinson, Stubby, Grim." Other ways he describes his men is by
the speech they use regularly. "Who's For the Game?" shows the thoughts that Jessie Pope has
towards the war; she views the war as very straight forward and simple; join the army, fight, win,
then go home. There is some reality points in the text even though they are understated, such as;
'It won't be a picnic – not much',
and
'Come back with a crutch'.
This second quote is very misleading, Pope is saying that a crutch is the about the worst thing that
could happen when over a million Englishmen died fighting for their country. She uses metaphors in
her poem including the title of the poem. In the title "Who's For The Game?" was has been
compared to an enjoyable experience making the war seem less scary, and making people become
more eager to go.
"Dulce Et Decorum Est" has four verses, all of
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Turf War Poem Summary
The poem by Olivia Wrenn revises the idea of that of "Turf War", which is an empty beauty. But a
beauty that will remain because it is fake. An imposter of real grass. The analysis then explains that
this is society's fault that has globally poisoned the minds of many human beings. While the poem,
than explains the cloned aspects of everything about "Turf War", while the analysis describes
imprint's. The poem is almost talking about a Utopian society when it interprets sameness. The
equality of all things. Such as the perfectly symmetrical blades of grass and picket fences. Also, the
poem unravels the idea of reality of all things. The reality of sameness, the reality of beauty, and the
reality of the American Dream. While the analysis barely
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Comparing War Poems 'Exposure And War Photographer'
In war poems, war is always condemned, dispraised and demonstrated as a futile and tragic event. In
both poems, "War Photographer" by Duffy and "Exposure" by Owen, poets illustrate their suffering
and acrimony of conditions of war.
"War Photographer" is an inspiration of the friendship of the poet with a photographer of war. It is
also an illustration of the brutality of war and the apathy of those who might see the photos in
newspapers. Whereas, Exposure is a poem written by a solider who was honoured for his bravery
and then was killed in the battle; therefore, Exposure has more authenticity.
Both poets show a sense of duty in their poems and they use several imageries. For instance, in
Exposure, Owen conveys physical and mental suffering when he says "Our ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
In Exposure, Owen uses a contradiction of cold and warm to express the solider's delusional mind
which is demolishing from hypothermia. Likewise, in War Photographer, Duffy demonstrates a
contradiction between rural England and nightmarish ware zones.
In War Photographer, encampment reinforces the sense of chaos and anarchy of the world, whilst in
Exposure, Owen uses a burden in the first, third, fourth and final stanza with a short half line, "But
nothing happens", which creates a circular structure implying never–ending suffering.
Moreover, Owen heightens our awareness of the conditions under which men ludicrously suffer by
his application of alliteration and personification. Furthermore, he presents war with a picture of
communal endurances, togetherness, and courage by the use of repetition of pronouns, "we" and
"our". On the other hand, the poetic techniques that Duffy implies is mostly hallucinative imagery.
In Exposure, Owen uses a regular pattern of ABBA, which creates the sense of status and an
emphasis on monotony. Whereas in war photographer, the rhyme encourages the idea that he is
trying to bring order and demands to a chaotic
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War Poems : War Poetry
Soldiers often pay the ultimate price for a nation's security. Fighting in battles throughout the
centuries leads to countless deaths that define a country. In many nations soldiers often fall while
enforcing their countries policies. There is no way possible in which a nation can thank a family of a
fallen soldier enough. Death of a soldier leaves a nation with a vein of guilt deep within the core of
the country. War poetry immortalizes the death of these soldiers in an attempt to forget about the
brutality of conflict and to remove the grief that comes from sending your nation's sons and
daughters into combat. War poetry immortalizes soldiers in an attempt to keep the nation moving
forward, to gain closure, and to paint a heroic image of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Heroism is common theme of war poetry. A heroic image serves as an aid in advancing the closure
of the families, by offering that their sons died honorably. Immortalization of soldiers' deaths as
heroic have helped justify the recruitment of a nation's youngest adults for centuries. War poetry by
different authors all seem to follow the same theme. In "Dead of '92" the author, Arthur Rimbaud,
draws reference to the nobility of death of soldiers and to the immortalization of the fallen. In the
following quote, "Oh soldiers, sown by death, your noble lover, in our old furrow you regenerate"
the authors use of the word "noble" once again paints a picture of honor associated with death of
soldiers (Rimbaud 8). Furthermore, the use of the word "furrow" references a trench or a crack. A
trench correlates to the crack that a nation feels when their vein of guilt becomes too large. The vein
of guilt cracks the nation. In addition to this, the author reference to guilt, the author uses the word
"regenerate" leads to the connection of immortalization. By regenerating you can live on forever as
does the memory of the soldier in this poem. The soldier lives on for all eternity by regenerating
itself in the guilt filled trench of the nation. The nobility of the soldier is immortalized throughout
the poem by this line. Immortalization in "Dead of '92" along with many other poems throughout
time has helped
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Dulce Et Decorum Est And The Horrors Of War Poem Analysis
The long standing expression that "the pen is mightier than the sword" has been repeated often
throughout the ages, but it can actually be taken seriously in light of war poetry. Although the
soldiers in World War I did not literally fight with swords, their experiences in combat were beyond
appalling, and some might say, beyond describable by words. Poetry, however, is a very powerful
form of expression, and when written by someone who has experienced the horrors of war, it can
deeply convey the grim reality of war. Utilising personal experiences and pre–war ideology, World
War I poets Wilfred Owens and Rupert Brookes' were able to recreate the glory and horror of the
Great War through their works 'Dulce Et Decorum Est' and 'The Soldier'. ... Show more content on
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The poet reveals the truthful and confronting depiction of death to the unknowing eyes who haven't
witnessed it and do not understand. The poem is told from the memories of a solider, which gives
way to haunting and helpless sights.
This is in utter contrast to the sonnet written by Brooke who depicts a highly idealistic and patriotic
vision of war. Brooke's pleasant image of death on the battlefield exemplified both the popular and
the governmental view of war. His optimistic ideology may reflect his lack of experience as he
never engaged in direct combat and died within seven months of enlistment. The repetitive use of
the noun 'England' emphasises the strong patriotic mood. England is personified as a kind, giving
mother and her sons, the soldiers, are seeds, whose death will sow life into the earth of 'foreign
fields'. While the poem is centred on death, there is no actual reference or description to the painful
reality of death as touched on by Owen. The Solider was valuable to the British government, who
used it as a means of propaganda. Thus, it was successful in inspiring loyalty and patriotic love in
the masses.
Poets intentionally implement figurative language devices to add dramatic effect and to paint a
specific mood and tone. Such example is evident in Owen's use of the simile 'his hanging face, like a
devil sick of sin'. The simile tries to describe the soldier's dreadful facial appearance as being almost
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Stephen Crane's Poem War Is Kind
Prompt: How does Stephen Crane's poem, "War is Kind" convey universal themes reflected in Civil
War literature? Universal themes help convey Stephen Crane's Poem, 'War is KInd'. These themes
are common among civil war litatureare. Crane uses Warfare, Life at home, and Patriotism. He uses
these three themes because they can cover what happened and how people felt during the wars.
There is also an ironic tone to the poem because it is difficult to understand war being kind in any
way. 'War is Kind' is a poem that focuses on the loss of three women who have lost their lover,
father. And son in the war. This expresses the the loss and sorrow that can come from a war. The
speaker in the poem used irony as a strategy to convince the reader of
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Different Attitudes of the First World War as Expressed...
When war first broke out in 1914 the general attitude towards it was patriotism. Many young men
grabbed the chance to fight for their country and show the women their braveness, they thought they
would come back heroes, however they did not know what happened beyond the cheerful and brave
faces seen in the news papers and the blissful time the soldiers had in their letters home. This made
many more men go to war. Things gradually changed, death, disease, mud, it had suddenly hit that
to fight for your country was not such an honour. Soldiers firstly began to write poetry because
poetry was the most important mode of expression for those who were shocked and disillusioned by
the realities of the First World War. I will be ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Brooke never knew what life was like in the trenches so all of his poems have a positive attitude
towards the war. I am studying a poem by Siegfried Sassoon called 'Base Details'. Sassoon was a
gallant officer who won the Military Cross as prize for bravery. He hated the massacre that war was
and the misconduct of the generals and politicians who made decisions of the war, he thought they
did not have the right to decide how or when people die. He protested against war by his poetry and
making a statement in The Times. He stopped fighting for the war after he was wounded during the
Battle of Arras and was sent home. He lived until 1967. All his poems were negative towards war as
he aimed to speak the truth about it. The last two poems I am studying are by a man named Wilfred
Owen. Owen is one of the most important poets from the wartime. Once war broke he found a great
desire to join in the war effort and became an officer. He was sent home to England after a huge
shell burst near him during the war. After this experience his views changed dramatically on the war.
He wrote the following to his mother, "That one of Christ's essential commands was passivity at any
price! Suffer dishonour and disgrace but never resort to arms." Later on he met Sassoon in 'Craig
Lockhart War Hospital'. Sassoon encouraged Owen's poetic writing. I will be studying two of
Owen's negative poems. I will begin comparing the poems by exploring the positive attitudes
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Pity And Humanistic Values Of War Poems By Wilfred Owen...
Accounts of the World War I were written by British soldiers who had not only experienced and
witnessed traumatic events in battle but also depicted them in poetry and prose which suppose to be
explored the humanistic values to the readers. Among those works, war poems are spelled out the
futility and agony of war in highly intensive way. The paper tries to elucidate the pity and
humanistic values of war poems through the select works of Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon.
Artistic creation is one of the best of reflecting reality and, at the same time, of perceiving and
apprehending it; it is also one of the strongest levelers of influencing the development of humanity.
By emphasizing the authentic and pragmatic details of war life of soldiers ... Show more content on
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War is one of the basic aspects of present history and it makes history more interesting. War is the
greatest of all the evils invented by humanity; but for countries war matters a lot. There are a lot of
differences between the words 'humanity' and the people of a particular 'country'. Since a country
makes up for a political entity, it never accepts the domain of humanitarian generosity. War has
always caused the deepest remorse and suffering in human history. Almost all the societies, from
ancient to the modern times, have undergone the trauma of war and its related pains. The zenith of
such destructive force of war was seen in the twentieth century with two massive world wars which
rattled the globe and effected unmeasured casualties of all possible kind. The western countries and
societies experienced the intense consequences of war in a far reaching scale from the beginning of
the World War I to the 1960s. The period from the starting of the World War I to the post–World War
II got the attention of the writers, especially poets, playwrights, novelist, artists and other literary
critics, since the particular age (1915–1960) was marked by the sufferings caused by the wars,
which penetrated into the inner psyche of the
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Compare the Presentation of War in the Poems 'Dulce Et...
Compare the Presentation of War in the poems 'Dulce et Decorum est', by Wilfred Owen and 'Icarus
Allsorts', by Roger McGough.
Dulce et Decorum est was written by Wilfred Owen and Icarus Allsorts was written by Roger
McGough. Dulce was written during WW1. Wilfred Owen wrote this poem while he was in a
military hospital. In the poem Owen reveals the chilling truth about what WW1 was really like.
Icarus was written in the tension of the Cold War. In the poem Roger McGough turns a very serious
(fake) event into a joke. Dulce was written in 1917 and published in 1920. It was written to show
that Jessie Pope's poem 'Who's for the Game' was a whole pot of lies. Icarus Allsorts was written in
1964. It was written to get residents of planet Earth ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The tone/mood in Dulce is sad and negative. "In all my helpless dreams, before my helpless sight he
plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning." In this quotation Owen is referring to a dream he has
had. Also he is describing what is happening in the dream– a man is drowning from gas. He is also
having this dream because the things he has seen in war are things that will stick in his head forever.
This is sad and negative. In 2012 we have computers, radios, T.V.s etc. and can find out what the
conditions were like in any war but back in 1917 when WW1 was going on the only way for a
family member to know what their son/dad/nephew/grandson was seeing was through a poem and
reading poems like Dulce would make them feel worried and sad.
Another difference is the way both poems are written. Icarus is written like a news report. Using a
lack of punctuation does this. This stanza is an example of the lack of punctuation used in the poem.
"From every corner of the earth bombs began to fly there were even missile jams no traffic lights in
the sky in the time it takes to blow your nose the people fell, the mushrooms rose." This lack of use
of punctuation makes you read the poem fast this relates to how quick a nuclear bomb can drop and
destroy. Also the lack of punctuation communicates the idea that all the events from the poem are
occurring simultaneously as the bombs explode. Dulce is written like a diary as it is written in the
first person. "I saw him drowning" Also Dulce is
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A Mechanized War Poem
This poem is my favorite of the three poems we have studied because of the beautiful language and
poetic techniques it employs, and because of how realistically it portrays war. The poem captures the
horror of troops caught in the middle of a brutal and merciless war, and their desperation. In a
mechanized war, attacks take place with frightening speed and intensity, where there is no place to
run or hide, and any response is not made out of logic but of pure fear. This hasty and irrational way
of thinking fueled only by terror typically only ended in death for both the attacker and the defender,
and severe trauma for any survivors. Using a series of present continuous verbs, the poet depicts fast
evolving action. He portrays the realness ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Hope is personified as a dying soldier, hiding from the other soldiers, and desperately struggling,
trying to grasp onto the mud, but miserably failing. Hope is described and "floundering" in the mud,
sinking, drowning, hope itself fighting a losing battle just to survive in the hearts of the soldiers. But
the soldiers all know that hope is lost and dead, and woefully plea "O! Jesus, make it stop". The
impassioned "O!" symbolizes the terror and pain they are enduring, and this line captures the
desperation of these poor soldiers as they try cling onto life, onto their
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Songs and Poems Written on Wars: Imagine by John Lennon
How lyrics and poetry mirror our thoughts. Poetry is a way to express opinions and ideas and this
can often be more effectively achieved through song.
The Vietnam War also known as the American War was the longest major conflict that Australians
have been involved in. It began in 1962 and ended in 1975. The Vietnam War was the cause of the
greatest political and social dissent in Australia since World War 1.
In 1959 war broke out between communist North Vietnam and democratic South Vietnam. America
and there allies, which include Australia, sent thousands of troops over to Vietnam in hope to stop
the spread of Communism. In total, approximately, 50 000 Australians served in the Vietnam War
from 1962 to 1975. Many of these troops were conscripted, meaning their military service was
compulsory.
Many songs and poems were written due to the impacts that war has had on society. Songs and
poems are able reflect the issues, values, attitudes and beliefs of the Vietnam War in the 1960's and
1970s.
Imagine was written by John Lennon in 1971. It was written about the Vietnam War, and the impacts
it was having on countries, governments and society. Throughout this song John encourages the
listeners to imagine what it would be like without religions, governments or possessions. He then
puts forward the idea that without governments and religion that there would be no war, hate or
poverty only peace.
"You may say that I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Bruce Weigl´s Poems on Vietnam War
To this day the Vietnam War is still considered to be one of the most devastating wars in history and
has been a topic of resentment to the American culture thirty–three years after its end. For the
American public it's marked as being the point in history where distrust in our government was at an
all–time high, mainly because most of the war's carnage was witnessed on television for the first
time. For all the bloodshed American and Vietnamese soldiers suffered through, the war has left a
perpetual mark not only on the United States but ultimately has left a permanent scar on the soldiers
who fought and managed to survive the war. Renowned war poet, Bruce Weigl, like most young
American men during the time was only nineteen when he ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Weigl has dug deep into his recollection of the war to produce work that can be thought of as
artistically beautiful. It's his aim to find the means, despite everything he's endured, to transcend
misery in his poetry. This is done on purpose and allows Weigl to employ a style in his poetry that's
dependent on the sound of words, to express an image so openly that the verses depict a genuine
emotion that doesn't pose as an insult to readers. Underneath the rubble of his misfortune there is a
level of integrity on display that readers can appreciate. Weigl likes to view the world objectively
and so does his poetry in a very responsible and accountable manner. A portion of the poetry created
by Weigl illustrates a gap between generations. The general belief is that the United States sees what
happened in Vietnam from a distance, but for those living in Vietnam it completely altered their
lives. Another excerpt from Weigl's memoir expresses this as he reveals the story of a woman he'd
met in Vietnam. Titled, "Her Life Runs like a Red Silk Flag" illustrates exactly just how twisted and
merciless war can be. The poem introduces Weigl receiving water from a woman who said she had
seen her childhood village bombed by planes. She didn't blame him and in her mind she viewed that
uneventful day as a horror that will perpetually haunt her for life but Weigl responds clarifying that
the real horror is digging inside of him as he writes, "there aren't any words that can
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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After The War Poem Analysis

  • 1. After The War Poem Analysis "All the arms we need are for hugging." Unknown. Writers have used their voices and opinions to protest war and its effects of their own experiences of the war. Stephen Crane worked as a journalist during the Spanish–American war and published the poem "War Is Kind" to show how people see the war, versus what the war was really like. Wilfred Owen wrote the poem "Dulce et Decorum Est", which means "It is sweet and right to die for your country". Owen fought during World War 1, where he also passed away. Tim O'Brien served in the Vietnam War and wrote The Things They Carried, to explain what the soldiers had to go through during this war by carrying heavy materials and close friends' deaths. Using his personal experiences and difficulties after the war, author Kevin Powers wrote The Yellow Birds after he returned home from serving in Iraq, explaining what goes through his mind after the war. Writers use imagery, irony, and structure to protest war. First of all, in the poem, "Dulce et Decorum Est," author Wilfred Owen uses imagery to protest war. In lines 21 and 22, Owen states "In all my dreams, before my helpless sight, He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning. " This quotation illustrates the image of someone dying during the war, and how corrupt it was on the author. After Owen states this, he then goes on to explain what they did with the bodies after someone would die, stating "Behind the wagon that we flung him in," (Line 24), and "If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood come gargling from the froth–corrupted lungs," (Lines 27–28). By using these words, Owen creates the horrifying image of someone dying, how horrific it was, and how it was an everyday thing for the other soldiers to go through. In his book, The Yellow Birds, Kevin Powers uses imagery to protest war by stating what it was like to kill someone during the war and what it will do to your mind. Lines 4–6 state, "or for that matter killing men and shooting them in the back and shooting them more times than necessary to actually kill them and it was like just trying to kill everything you saw sometimes." This quotation explains how gory the war was and how soldiers kept shooting even if they did not know what they were shooting at ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. The Importance Of War In Poems Good morning class, this morning/ afternoon I will be discussing how war is represented within society and how text structures and stylistic devices help to emphasise war within poems. I will be reading and analysing the poems Perhaps by Vera Brittain in 1919 and In Flanders Fields by John McRae in 1915. Perhaps and In Flanders Fields are both a Lyric poem and are about the feelings of grief and sorrow for loved ones lost in war. Perhaps was written by V. Brittain in response to the death of her late fiancé Roland Aubrey Leighton, who was killed at the age of 20 by a sniper in 1915, only four months after she had accepted his marriage proposal. In Flanders Fields was written by J.McRae in response to the death of his friend and fellow soldier Lieutenant Alexis Helmer killed In action on the 2nd of May 1915. The theme of these poems is loss. This theme is explored through the poet's use of tone and mood, the poetic techniques used and the social comment the poem makes. Each of these will be discussed in detail today. The theme of perhaps is emphasised through the tone and mood of the poem. The moods of the poem are sadness and grief. This is created through the use of repetition, enjambment and alternate rhyme. Thought the poem Brittian uses repetition in the form of the words "perhaps" and "although" to emphasis the fact that although her fiancé has passed, perhaps she will find happens again. Enjambment followed by a pause is used at the end of the poem in the lines ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4.
  • 5. Poem Analysis: Vietnam War Poems 1. The speaker at the beginning tells the reader his love for America after God and lastly himself in the phrase "next to of course god america i". Most of the poem is in quotation marks, probably because it was from a public speech. This unknown speaker could well have been a politician or a soldier showing his patriotism and religious belief. It is a poem about patriotism and the war. The poem starts off with the speaker being someone that is a patriot and feels strongly about America. As the poem progresses it takes a different approach becoming very sarcastic. In this sarcasm the writer shows that we are ignoring the negative aspects of the war. Therefore bringing to our attention that patriotism can manipulate people into doing things they usually wouldn't. 2.The speaker portrays this by reciting and putting together lines from American patriotic songs such as "My Country Tis of Thee" and the "Star Spangled Banner". Despite starting off by showing his love for America at first, he then ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The title shows faith, patriotism, and self–importance. The speaker loved America but did not love her war. He is very straightforward with his poem about how foolish people can be but still glorifies America. The element of the poem is mostly tone because it depicts sarcasm and even anger largely in part because of To make the sarcasm of the speaker anymore clearer he begins to exaggerate. The speaker mentions "heroic happy dead" meaning that "sons" mentioned before are the young soldiers that went to war and died. To the patriot they're honorable heroes but for the speaker what can be more beautiful than soldiers running to their death "rushed like lions to the roaring slaughter" a form of simile showing the bravery of the soldiers. Patriotism can sometimes lead one to do such things for their country, including dying. The author questions the way patriotism is interpreted. A poem is trying to oppose the idea of patriotism. It is opposing the idea of blind ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. War Takes Over Everything in Walt Whitman’s Poem, Drum Taps The overall theme in Walt Whitman's "Drum Taps" is about the way war consumes everything and monopolizes every facet of life; particularly the land the war is fought on. When analyzing the poem, the first stanza talks about the movement of war from the farms, the second stanza talks about the progression of war from the farm to the city. In stanza three this journey continues through the battlefield, through the halls of power and finally into the homes, moving from the public to private spheres of life. Throughout the entire poem there is an emphasized pulse of drums that beats within the lines. This pulse of drums resonates throughout the entire poem and prompts me to wonder how Whitman intended to utilize this mechanism. Furthermore, I want to uncover if the sounds of these drums is symbolic in some way, and if they are, then I wonder if this symbolism represents a positive view or negative view on war. My first interpretation is that these drums represent Whitman's negative perspective on war. I feel that the use of the pulse of drums throughout the poem acts as a mechanism that Whitman uses in order to discourage war. I feel that these sounds are symbolic of the dire news at the time that consisted of the battles. It seems that Whitman is addressing this pulse of drums in attempt to highlight the effect this war will have on the country. In this poem, I see the clear cry for battle as a cry by someone who is naïve and does not yet know what the ultimate cost of war ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. War Is Kind Poem Analysis In "War Is Kind", Stephen Crane satirically addresses the death notifications delivered to the family of the deceased soldier which undermine and romanticize the actual brutality of war and the deaths of countless soldiers. Crane illustrates two differing settings of the poem–the homefront and the battlefield–through purposeful word choice. When describing the homefront where the news of soldiers' deaths are mournfully delivered, Crane includes euphonious words such as "weep" and "affrighted steed." The euphony achieved by the long vowel sounds in these words establishes a sense of quietness and serenity. In addition, the melodious diction emphasizes the gentleness of the death notification, and imitates the soft, comforting voice of the informer. On the other hand, in the interluding stanzas, Crane employs harsh, dissonant diction. For example, the second stanza states, "Hoarse, booming drums of the regiment." When read aloud, the cacophony established by these rhythmic, staccatoed beats reflects the chaos of the war–almost similar to the rapid sound of fusillade and artillery fire. Crane also utilizes similar techniques in the fourth stanza when he states that "These men were born to drill and die." Since the sentence is composed mostly of words beginning with "b" and "d", which are regarded as plosives, the resulting sentence parallels the thundering explosions on the battlefront. The contrasting euphony and cacophony each reflect separate connotations–the home– front stanzas possessing a peaceful setting where death is regarded as heroic sacrifices while the battlefield stanzas label war as mindless slaughtering. However, the extreme contrast between the imagery of the two settings raises doubts for the readers, causing them to question if the scenes of serenity are truly peaceful, or merely mock tranquility. These doubts of the reader are confirmed by Crane when he reveals the disingenuousness of the death notification through irony. Crane illustrates this irony between the death notification and the actual scenes of the war with various forms of juxtaposition. The most blatant contrast is the imagery between each alternating stanza. As previously stated, the first, third, and fifth stanza describes a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10.
  • 11. Analysis of Bruce Dawe's Anti-War Poem, Homecoming Essay An anti–war poem inspired by the events of the Vietnam War, Homecoming inspires us to think about the victims of the war: not only the soldiers who suffered but also the mortuary workers tagging the bodies and the families of those who died in the fighting. The author, Australian poet Bruce Dawe, wrote the poem in response to a news article describing how, at Californian Oaklands Air /Base, at one end of the airport families were farewelling their sons as they left for Vietnam and at the other end the bodies of dead soldiers were being brought home. Additionally, he wrote in response to a photograph, publishes in Newsweek, of American tanks (termed 'Grants' in the poem) piled with the bodies of the dead soldiers as they returned to the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... These sections allow for a change in emotion as each represents a separate part of the 'homecoming': Saigon describes the packaging of the bodies and how the soldiers are zipped up in green plastic bags; the flight represents the travel home, which metaphorically could also be their souls to heaven; and the third section is the arrival of the bodies in Australia. The use of pronouns gives the first two sections an emotionless feel as we do not learn specific names or information about the victims. However, when the scene changes to urban Australia in the final section the emotion changes to grief and regret for the families. The emotion of the speaker is indicated by signature language, the poet describing how "telegrams tremble like leaves from a wintering tree" and "small towns where dogs in the frozen sunset raise muzzles in mute salute". Comparing the telegrams fluttering to the ground to leaves falling from a tree in winter reinforces our assumption of the tragic news contained within the telegrams: the "wintering tree" is clearly a metaphor for death and hence we know that enclosed within the telegrams is notification of the soldiers' demise. Equally moving is the reference to man's best friend mourning its loss, the poet describing how the dogs respectfully acknowledge the precious ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12.
  • 13. Analysis Of The Poem ' War Is Hell ' Sandra Gonzalez Enix– 7th Hour War Is Hell 29 September 2014 Insert Title Here Hero. According to Webster's New World Dictionary, a hero is defined as "any person, male or female, admired for courage, nobility, etc." (Webster's New World Dictionary, "hero 1"). Webster's Pocket Dictionary, comparably, defines a hero as "a person of great courage, spirit, etc., especially one who has undergone great danger or difficulty" (Webster's Pocket Dictionary, "hero 3"). Heroes are not born heroes. Yes, everyone is born with the ability to be a hero, but in time, they may or may not become one. In our society, heroes are greatly acclaimed in the media. Whenever some person takes a bullet for a loved one or saves a child from a burning building, there is a huge deal made about it, and they become known as heroes. But a person does not have to physically save someone's life to be a hero. A hero can also be someone who simply stands up for what he or she believes. Much like Atticus Finch from To Kill a Mockingbird, a hero can be someone who knows what is right and does the right thing, even if he is ridiculed for doing so. Also, whether or not a person is a hero depends on the perspective of the person. For instance, a little girl may think her father is the greatest man alive, but her first grade classmate does not think so– instead, she thinks her father is a hero. The daughters of the man who is known for deterring United Airlines Flight 93 on September 11, 2001 definitely think him a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. Poem Analysis: The Vietnam War The poem is about the return of our troops and the support we give them. In the poem they are talking about how it affects the soldiers and their families. They also talk about the public's reaction and how they just don't understand, because they haven't been where they were. Higher ranked officials take advantage of the soldiers or young people going into war. The soldiers fight for peace and don't get it in return. The return of our troops is a wonderful thing, think about it. How happy would you be to be alive, but at the same time how much you just wanted to die. The feeling is 50 50. You can come back with the joy of having your family back but all those dreams, nightmares, loss of dignity for some, horrible reminders of how many people ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16.
  • 17. War Photographer Poem Analysis War Photographer by Carol Ann Duffy is about a photographer who is struggling with the consequences and reality of war. The voice of criticism from the experience of war combined with the use of poetic devices exposes the theme of war. The poet uses compelling and distressing illustrations in this poem to enthrall pathos into the reader's feelings. The use of pathos stirs up emotions of sympathy, sorrow, and despair. Thus, his photographic films are filled with pictures of the genuine agony caused by the bloodshed of warfare. The rhyme scheme is laid out in four regular six–line stanzas, with each stanza ending with a rhyming couplet. It sets the tone to create a wonderful contrast between the positive and negative prospects of war. As the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Through the diverse methods of using powerful images, contrasts, references to the locations of infamous war zones, metaphors, sentence structure, and formatting styles, the readers are able to see the egregious poem freely. As Carol Ann Duffy discloses the poem, the photographs contain countless images of hardship and suffering endured by those affected by the war. The war photographer is described as "a priest" who is ready to intone a mass. The use of euphemism of the photographer gives the readers a convincing mind of the thoughts and feelings of the photographer. The word 'priest' suggests that the photographer gets a keen sense of responsibility and obligation. In this instance, he acts like a messenger showing the suffering societies in war zones opening other people's eyes for those who don't know about the dangers where war is present. "He has a job to do." This short sentence highlights how he is required to keep his concentration and focus on his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
  • 19. Anti War Poem Homecoming Disparity of power in society is often created in the chaos of wars, in which it leads to abuse in power and loss of identity in individuals. Through the anti–war poem Homecoming by Dawe, responders have discovered and gained an insight on the power of war, which has impacted and led to the degradation of the 'homecoming' soldiers in 'they're...them', as an anaphora illustrates the bitter attitude of the persona, merging and exhibiting Dawe's dismissive perspective of war. The dominance of conflicts has impacted on the soldiers the most as it is denoted in the free verse lines, reflecting the unstructured senseless tragedy of war that stimulated their powerlessness. On the same hand, Dawe continues with his critical view of militarism in confronting ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20.
  • 21. World War Two Poem Annotated Just by reading the title, we know that this poem is about World War II. The first stanza talks about high school kids "training for war." Hall is comparing a school sport to fighting in the war which, to me, is a bit of an exaggeration. You are not very likely to get badly hurt playing a sport and, if you do, you can usually come back from it fairly well. In war, it is extremely easy to become injured, and most war injuries can cause you to lose your life. We see an example of this in Stanza II when Dom dies in battle. During WWII, the military drafted young men to fight in the war. Dom was just a kid, sent off to fight in the war, and died not even a year after being one of the high schoolers playing sports. His life had barely started before ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22.
  • 23. War Is Kind, And The Poem, Anthem For Doomed Youth Knock, knock, knock on the door; a trembling hand reaches to turn the knob on the door, not knowing if want lies beyond the door is good news or tragic news about a loved one that is off at war. Everyday loved ones wait at home waiting for news or their loved one to come home, hopefully unharmed both physically and mentally, safe from the wrath of war. War and violence can affect many people directly or indirectly in quite different ways. These effects on people involved with war and violence can be found in the movie Hacksaw Ridge, the poem "War is Kind," and the poem "Anthem for Doomed Youth." In the movie Hacksaw it can be found throughout the entire movie the effects war can have on a family and even on people that are not related to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Doss decided from then on to become a conscientious objector and Doss's father quit the abusive relationship. Doss then left for war a few years later, leaving behind his broken father, his mother, and his girlfriend whom he was engaged too. Doss found that not everyone agreed with his decision to not bare arms and Doss was said to be a coward. Doss missed his wedding because he was not allowed to leave boot camp until he shot a gun and his soon to be wife was left standing on the alter. Doss was finally cleared to be a medic in the army and was sent to Okinawa to fight on Hacksaw Ridge. Doss ran through the battlefield saving many men and when the army retreated back off of the cliff Doss stayed behind. Doss went through battlefield, dodging the Japanese enemies and lowered over seventy American soldiers along with a few Japanese enemies down to safety. Doss was soon saw as a hero in the eyes of his squad that had once despised him, and had earned the Medal of Honor. Doss's bravery throughout the battle of Hacksaw Ridge saved many lives that then affected the lives of the families of the soldiers he had saved. The movie, Hacksaw Ridge was based off of the true story of Desmond Doss and Gibson shows how violent and gruesome the Battle of Hacksaw Ridge really was. Doss is a Seventh Day Adventist, and was full of patriotism but he was affected by his father 's internal fight that was left over from World War One. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24.
  • 25. Poem Analysis: War Photographer The poem War Photographer narrates the hardships and horrific events, which a war photographer must face and capture, in a third–person's perspective. It brings to awareness how being surrounded by media daily has de–sensitized humans and how apathetic and uncaring the rest of the world, who is not directly affected by the war, is. This poem indicates themes of the effects of war, grief, and third–world countries. The poem War Photographer opens in the tranquil setting of the photographer's darkroom or developing room. He is compared to a priest and it seems like a ritual is taking place. This religious imagery is effective in conveying the dedication the photographer feels towards his job and how often the photographer comes face to face with death. There is a suggestion that the darkroom is like a sanctuary for the photographer, where he can finally be alone. The quote "spools of suffering" tells us that the amount of horrific photographs seem to be endless. The first stanza ends with the quotation "all flesh is grass", which reinforces the religious imagery. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The phrase "solutions slop in trays" uses onomatopoeia, to include the sense of sound. The photographer's hands are shaking now, though they did not tremble when taking the photo. This implicates that in order to do his job on the field, he must distance himself from all emotions. However, he is able to let down his guard in the privacy of the darkroom as he finally reacts to the terrible suffering he was forced to witness and capture. He considers the difference between Rural England and the war zones that he visits, noting how our ordinary problems can be dispelled by the simplicity of bad weather. The injustice of the situation is represented when he says how our children don't have to be afraid of landmines, when they are ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26.
  • 27. Summary Of The Poem After The War Poem When faced with the countless problems of war including death, disease, sorrow, and loss, soldiers develop and intense bond between one another as they seek support in one another. A brotherhood is formed among these soldiers who rely on one another for protection and companionship amid a time in their lives where they are faced with the constant threat of death and violence everyday of their lives. But what happens to them after the war? In After the War, poet brings awareness to how the war–torn soldier attempts to reestablish their self in a society they have been isolated from for so many years through use of free verse and repetitive phrases, which further reinforces the theme throughout the poem. Use of free verse in this poem creates a lack of structure that appears to parallel the soldier's own lack of structure and direction in his own life after he leaves the war. The poem begins with the image of a soldier's and his squadron raiding a farmhouse: When he got to the farmhouse, he rifled through the cabinets, drawers, and cupboards, and his buddies did too. The place was abandoned, or so he thought, and his buddies did too. The first stanza connotes a slight sense structure as the phrase " and his buddies did too" is repeated after stating each action the soldier does. Moreover, the lines themselves are structured in such a way that suggests a deliberate organized form– especially in comparison to how the rest of the poem is written. Most interesting about the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28.
  • 29. ESSAY ON 3 WAR POEMS ESSAY ON 3 WAR POEMS No man wants to go to war and no government wants war but there are many different circumstances that lead to the action of war. Those involved in war will have political and personal views towards it. The First World War was greeted with great enthusiasm and patriotism; however it was the war in which millions died compared to the wars after. In the past 200 years warfare has changed and with this change the ideas on war have changed too. Wilfred Owen, Rudyard Kipling and David Roberts are well known war poets. Using a selection of their poems we hope to analyze the two conflicting views on war. To understand what influenced the poets we need to get an idea of their social and historical background. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He than counteracts these thoughts and statements by saying "Who stands if freedom falls?" and "Who dies if England live?" By this I think he means that even if you die during this war you will live on through England and the freedom of mankind so fight because you have nothing to loose. If you compare this poem to 'The solider' written by Rupert Brooke in the same year, you will find that the main view is the same. Both poems try to glorify warfare. I think this is because the poems were written in the early stages of WW1 before most of the blood was spilled, so both poets took the opportunity to recruit more soldiers. Wilfred Owen was a solider in WW1 and battled at the front most of the war; because of this I feel his view on the war can be trusted. Wilfred Owens poem 'Dulce Et Decorum Est' Was first published after the war in 1921 even though it was probably written between the years 1915 and 1918 like his other poems. I think this is because it describes the true horror of warfare so the generals didn't want it published as it might discourage others from signing up to join the army. The title of the poem is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30.
  • 31. Analysis of the Poem War Photographer War Photographer by Carol Ann Duffy In his darkroom he is finally alone with spools of suffering set out in ordered rows. The only light is red and softly glows, as though this were a church and he a priest preparing to intone a Mass. Belfast. Beirut. Phnom Penh. All flesh is grass. He has a job to do. Solutions slop in trays beneath his hands which did not tremble then though seem to now. Rural England. to ordinary pain which simple weather can dispel, to fields which don't explode beneath the feet of running children in a nightmare heat. Something is happening. A stranger's features faintly start to twist before his eyes, a half–formed ghost. He remembers the cries of this man's wife, how he sought approval without words ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It is seen that the photographer's feelings are brought out in two contrasting situations, at home and while at warfront. The poet continues to describe the sufferings of the photographer when his mental state is compared as he is travelling between the two contrasting worlds – one the warfront which is full of destruction and chaos and the other is 'Rural England,' probably countryside that is peaceful and serene. He compares the pain of war to simple pain of changing weather back at home in England. There being nothing worse then the harsh weather that the children have to face as against the mines that explode on the running feet of the children affected by war. This only tells us that the photographer longs peace and he is deeply moved by the affected children. His prolonged thoughts are presented with great effect by the use of enjambment in this line and this adds to the effect of continuity of thoughts. From a realistic tone the poet moves on to a mysterious tone when she opens this third stanza with 'something is happening.' Probably something unforgettable, frustrating and unbearable is happening. This is unfolded in the subsequent line, 'half–formed ghost,' it's the body of a dead soldier which seems to be haunting the photographer who is dead. His conscience is pricking him for he had to seek the dead soldier' wife's s permission ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. Comparing War Poems Essays Comparing War Poems Died of Wounds and Suicide in the Trenches are two poems, which I will be comparing the similarities and differences, which were written by the same author. Both these poems were written by a person called Siegfried Sasson, who wrote most of his poems during the World War One, which outlined how bad the war was to those at home after suffering from being Shell Shocked. I will be comparing the language it uses, ideas it contains and the way it is structured between both poems, which Siegfried Sasson uses to demonstrate that war is evil, and should be stopped. The theme in Died of Wounds is that soldiers become shell–shocked and go insane. They also suffer from mental and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... On the forth line of Died of Wounds the author says "He did the business well" where "business" is a metaphor, for it is the earnest of the wounded solider to draw attention to himself. Also on the last line of Died of Wounds the author describes dead soldier as a "slight wound" where he is comparing a dead solider to a small wound, and therefore it does not matter, and he is also comparing the country to a solider, which is hardly notices a slight wound. There is also some similarity in Suicide in the Trenches where Siegfried Sasson describes the trenches as if it is like hell meaning that war was like a place where young people went and got themselves killed. On the first line of Died of Wounds, Siegfried Sasson wrote "Wet White", which is alliteration, which is a type of sound device. He also does this on the third line, ninth line and the last line. This makes the poem sound better. There is also some similarity in Suicide in the Trenches, where the author also uses this device to make the poem catchier but instead uses different letters to make it sound different and better. There is also another similarity in both poems where there are no assonances, which is the same as alliteration but it does not occur in consonants ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34.
  • 35. War Photographer Poem How is the theme of war portrayed through imagery in the poems Lament by Gillian Clarke and War Photographer by Carol Ann Duffy? Lament is written by Welsh poet Gillian Clarke, which is an elegy where she laments the loss of lives due to the Gulf War in 1991. Through the use of imagery and figurative language, the theme of war is portrayed violently and unpleasantly. Similarly, in Carol Ann Duffy's poem War Photographer, war is depicted through the description of developing photos that the photographer has taken, in which one of several will be chosen for the Sunday Supplement. This poem not only uses language and literary devices to reveal the consequences of conflict, but also through tone and atmosphere reflects the dismissive attitudes ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the opening stanza of War Photographer, references to religion, 'light is red', 'church', 'priest', 'Mass', 'All flesh is grass', are very prominent and symbolic. The photographer is metaphorically described as a priest preparing to say Mass, with the names of countries in war instead of words of a service, and with the red light of the darkroom symbolizing the church tabernacle lamp. This metaphor reminds us of the transience of life, when one death can mean so little. Likewise in Lament, the repetition of 'For' at the start of each verse brings a chanting–like effect, which reflect religion and ritualism. The entire poem is almost like a song, a desolate tune of mourning for the lost lives. In addition, 'pulsing burden', also suggests a rhythmic and regular beat to the poem. This phrase in itself is a paradox, where pulsing represents energy and liveliness, whereas burden represents a weight and unpleasantness; it reflects the burden of war on the country, repressing animals and humans who try to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. Sun Wars Poem I was just having a normal day when the sun god came to visit us! Well, I guess who we thought was the sun god. We welcome him and dressed him in religious robes and gave him a cup of our people's blood, but he went all crazy. Him and others started blasting us with booms and loud noises. They left and later sent a message of peace. We didn't know if we could trust them because they allied with our enemy, but we decided to leave it. We met again and offered them gold, hoping to make them leave. They didn't leave! We met and made peace. We welcomed them like honored guests and let them stay in one of our palaces. That was a mistake. The leader of the white men, Hernan, put our king under arrest! Then, there was a formal transfer of power! Oh ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. The Different Aspects of Conflict in a Selection of Four... The Different Aspects of Conflict in a Selection of Four War Poems Many poems have been witnessed throughout history that show different views on war and the glory and sacrifices made. Everyone was affected, from the men in the front lines to women and children working back at home. Men involved in the war effort often wrote poems to record their thoughts and feelings, or simply to pass the time. Poetry was an outlet through which they could express great depth of meaning by condensing it into a few words. In this assignment I am going to write about the war poems entitled 'The Charge of the Light Brigade', a poem written in 1854 by Lord Alfred Tennyson, 'Dulce et Decorum est', a poem ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... England is personified as being a mother. Brooke's message in this poem is that if he should die, the place of his death will be made richer by his body. The body will carry these English blessings, passing them onto the ground on which it lies. Brooke writes his own epigraph and shows a moving sense of the poet's deep love of England and it's people. The poet feels he can influence the thoughts of those left behind, with this he will try to cement the continuation of those qualities that he thinks of as being essentially English. Brooke has transformed the poem into a sonnet, not addressed to a loved one but to his country. In this poem the moods of the first few months of the war are summed up. Despite the subject matter there is a sort of serenity in the poem, even the words 'If I should die' suggests that he expects to survive. The reality of the horror had still to be discovered. This poem mirrors the sentiments expressed in " The Charge of the Light Brigade ". This event took place in 1854 and is still remembered as one of the most famous triumphs in British history. The truth is that Lord Cardigan suicidally led his troops " Into ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. War Is No Poem Analysis "When human beings live together, conflict is inevitable. War is not." Oodles of poems explore different aspects of the violent theme of conflict. Carol Ann Duffy's 'War Photographer,' Chinua Achebe's 'A Mother in a Refugee Camp' and Louis MacNeice's 'Prayer Before Birth' portray conflict through the disasters of warfare. In an akin way, the poem 'Disabled' by Wilfred Owen displays a youngster whose limbs were lost in the battlefield and is now waiting for death. 'Piano' by D. H. Lawrence is another poem which depicts a man's reminiscence of his mother, who might've died due to some form of conflict. Similar to 'A Mother In A Refugee Camp' is W. H. Auden's 'Refugee Blues,' both successfully displaying the arduous lives of refugees. Therefore, I will be analyzing the theme of conflict as well as comparing the above mentioned poems in this essay. Firstly, what is conflict? Conflict is a form of disagreement or argument, usually a protracted one. Most of the times, conflict between people leads to a prolonged dispute, violence and even a clash: known as a war. War is generally the main outcome of conflict; and is quite a disastrous, disgusting and dreadful one. The catastrophic effects of war on people's lives are evident in the poems that I am comparing. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It is clearly shown in the first line: "In his darkroom he is finally alone." The quote also informs the audience that the poet has returned there to develop photographs after a long, horrifying trip abroad. The darkroom serves as the metaphor for the photographer's depression. It might also signify the way humans purposely hide from unpleasant truths. Whereas 'A Mother In A Refugee Camp' is, quite straightforwardly, set in a refugee camp. However, the setting of 'Prayer Before Birth' is rather different as there is no set place. The poem is a plea from an unborn child to a divine power, so the setting might be in the womb of the foetus' ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. Analysis Of The Poem ' War Photographer ' By Carol Ann Duffy Poetry is a way of confronting experiences and the issues it raises for the living. Death is rife during global conflicts and some poets use their craft to show the pain and suffering aspects of death. 'War Photographer' by Carol Ann Duffy presents people's death through both literal and figurative lexis. It uses the metaphorical lens of a camera to create an opinion about war and the role of media is reporting it humanely. 'A Mother in a Refugee Camp' by Chinua Achebe presents the suffering and torment of death with strong sensory imagery to reflect the horrible and inevitable events levied on innocent victims. 'Vultures', also by Chinua Achebe presents death by contrasting cruelty and love in the Second World War and obliquely, the Nigerian civil war. Death also befalls every individual in an inevitable manner and grief is just as intolerable when someone you love is taken from you. 'Remember' by Christina Rossetti is bittersweet; whilst embracing death, she rejects death as she is torn between her lover remembering her, or forgetting her as remembering would be too painful for him. 'Mid–term break' by Seamus Heaney is a first hand account of his painful early experience of his family tragedy and 'Funeral blues' by W.H Auden, consist of an unnamed speaker lamenting the death of someone close to him. 'War Photographer' by Carol Ann Duffy is a powerful and poignant poem that dichotomizes two worlds. It addresses the hardships of war through the eyes of an individual and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. War Poem Comparison Essay Gavin Ross Pre–Entry Access Class – English Module Tutors – Aimee McNair and Kevin Wilson Q. In an essay of not more than 1,500 words compare and contrast ONE PAIR of the two pairs of poems printed below. Your answer should exhibiy a clear understanding of each poem's meaning and tone, and you should consider the effect and importance of formal features, such as rhyme scheme, sound patterning, word choice, figurative language and punctuation. Date handed in : 31st January 2011 This essay will compare the poems "On Passing the New Menin Gate" by Siegfried Sassoon (1927) and "Anthem For Doomed Youth" by Wilfred Owen (1917) and decipher whether there are any contrasts of worthwhile note. It will explore the meanings of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Sassoon and Owen's rhetorical style help connect the reader to the events being described and communicate successfully their feelings of anguish about the war. Sassoon and Owen further communicate their contempt for the war and its unforgiving treatment of the soldiers through the use of alliteration. Sassoon says, "Paid, with a pile of peace–complacent stone" (line 7). The sarcastic use of "Paid" suggests Sassoon does not believe the Menin Gate to be a worthwhile reward. The personification of the monument when Sassoon says, "peace–complacent stone" (line 7) creates the idea that the monument has an unjustified feeling of self–worth and importance and stands arrogantly, believing itself to be a comparable reward to the loss of life and misery endured by thousands of soldiers and families. The repetition of the letter "p" makes it sound as though Sassoon is spitting his words out in a bitter and degrading manner and is effective in demonstrating his anger about the perceived ignorance displayed by the memorial (Internet 10). Owen also achieves an emphatic effect when he uses alliteration in "Anthem For Doomed Youth" when he says, "Only the stuttering rifles' rapid rattle" (line 3). This harsh sounding repetition of the letter "r" is used for the purpose of sound imagery to help convey the horrors of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. The Next War Poem Analysis In Wilfred Owen's war poetry, the distinctive idea criticised all through all his poetry are the ideas of the horrors, brutality and waste of war and the hypocrisy and lies held by many back homes. This idea is developed a significant amount in two of his poems, "Dulce et Decorum Est" and "The Next War" through the shocking images Owen creates. With both poems being written in first person plural, Owen invites us into his poem which allows his idea to be properly conveyed to his audience and his desired outcome, to make the people back home realise the terror of war and complete lack of glory, to be reached. In "Dulce et Decorum Est", Wilfred Owen boldly criticises the way civilians mislead and manipulated the unknowing soldiers previous to and during World War I and explores the horrors of war. Owen invites us into his poem by asking us to "watch" the scenes of men with "white eyes writhing" he is retelling to make the reader feel what he is feeling, that the war is a waste. He speaks of events he witnessed and the "boys" reactions to events seen through the simile of "coughing like hags". In the final stanza of the poem, Owen speaks reflectively of the terrifying scenes of men with "incurable sores" he was witness to and at times experienced and from gaining the compassion of the reader through his descriptive language, "limped on, blood–shod". Owen delivers his idea on the war in a shocking way which allows us to see his angry and bitter views on it. As Owen describes ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. War Poems War is a time of violence, protest, death and pain for many people around the world. With this conflict, a lot of poetry is written because poetry is one of the most common ways for people to put across their feelings about situations. War is one of these situations for which many people have very strong feelings. A common theme in war poetry is the transformation that war brings about in a person. Many poems reveal boys going into war and becoming young men after the experience. Another dominant theme in war poems is about the forgotten soldiers who lost their lives and weren't remembered. Many poems have been written about war and the feelings evoked by war. Even though a lot of war poetry was written before World War 1, the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However Gibson uses his words well and there are some smart lines throughout the poem. The rhyming is very simple and the final word in each line rhymes with the other final word in each two–lined stanza. The simple nature of the rhythm in the poem gives it a gentle flow which is very appropriate for the subject matter. The poet's ability to use basic words, structure and rhythm appropriately enables him to create a smart and crisp poem. The simplicity of the poem allows the readers to recognize the serious subject–matter of the poem, which is war. This next poem was written by me. I got the inspiration for this poem after reading a number of other war poems and remembering all the people who lost their lives at war. It is called "Young lives lost" The eerie night was torn By the blistering light of dawn Many soldiers, many very young, Their first time holding a gun. Some no more than 16 years Bravely holding back the burning tears Youth's ignorance had been lost The line of no return was crossed
  • 50. War had turned these boys to men Many would never see home again And unless the senseless killing is ceased The departed souls will never rest in peace. My poem is written in a similar style to Gibsons' poem. I followed the same rhyming patterns, and used a simple structure, however my poem uses some slightly more complicated words. The general theme is the same, but ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 51.
  • 52. Comparing the Attitudes Demonstrated between Pre-War and... Comparing the Attitudes Demonstrated between Pre–War and at War with Brooke's Poem The Soldier and Owen's Poem Dulce et Decorum est Dulce et Decorum Est was written at war in 1917 by an English poet and World War I soldier Wilfred Owen. Dulce et decorum est is written in a very bitter manner, by a man who had very strong anti–war sentiments. The 27–line poem, written loosely in iambic pentameter is told from the eyes of Wilfred Owen. The opening line of this poem contains two similes which compares the soldiers to beggars and hags 'bent double, like old beggars under sacks', 'coughing like hags.' This is not how we would portray young, fit, soldiers, but the fact of the matter is that they are no ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Owen uses the word boys which reminds us of their youth, but having already described them as aged and disabled we come to the fact that their youth was stolen, and we are also confronted with the concept that they are innocent victims within the war. "But someone still was yelling out and stumbling" this is the line where Owen begins his vivid description of a gas attack death. It is introducing us to the situation this soldier is in from a third person view. The next line; "And flound'ring like a man in fire of lime" describes the helplessness of this poor soldier who is about to die. The image of the man "guttering, choking, drowning" permeates Owen's thoughts and dreams, forcing him to live this grotesque nightmare over and over again. The word 'Dim' in the next line has a lot of significance and meaning. Firstly it describes the scene, the light, giving it an eerie and gloomy feel, one with little hope. Secondly, it describes the chances this soldier has, having shown us that war can be left up to chance, Owen is describing the chances this boy now has for survival. 'I saw him drowning', shows that Owen directly refers to himself. This is to personify the entire poem, to make it much more real to the reader. It is showing us that all the horrors Owen has described are ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 53.
  • 54. Poem Fact Sheet: The Vietnam War VIETNAM FACT SHEET The Vietnam war was a long ,costly armed conflict that pitted the communist regime of North Vietnam and its Southern allies,known as the viet cong, against south Vietnam and its principal ally,the United States. It ended with the withdrawal of the U.S. forces in 1973 and the unification of Vietnam under communist control two years later.However it was indeed one of the bloodiest wars and more than 3 million people including 58,000 Americans were killed during the conflict. Ted offensive: was a series of major attacks by communist forces in the vietnam war. Early in 1968,Vietnamese communist troops seized and briefly held some major cities at the time.During january 1968 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When young men denied the right to vote were conscripted to fight for their country. While this right was still in the air many people like president Dwight Eisenhower mentioned how this right should be passed.He thought that if this men that go to war and risk their lives with the war . that they are old enough to go to war then they should be old enough to vote. The role of media: Vietnam was a very well known place in the media,because of the whole war between the united states and north vietnam it made the media notes all the thing that happened.Although many were killed because of the war, many other were also staying in saigon to be safe. This war was really know for being the first war to make it to the television as the first television war. The credibility gap: Is a term that came into wide use with journalism,political and public discourse in the united states during the 1960s and 1970s. The credibility gap happened because of president Johnson lack of communication of what happened with the united states involving itself in the vietnam war. He was so into wanting to stop the war into increasing and communist spreading. That he wouldn't communicate with the people and they wouldn't be informed well so they would start wondering.however the medial also had a huge impact on this because of videos and picture out ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 56. Essay Comparison of Three First World War Poems Comparison of Three First World War Poems The three poems that I will be studying in this essay are "Dulce Et Decorum Est" by Wilfred Owen, "Comrades: An Episode" by Robert Nichols and "Who's For The Game?" by Jessie Pope. These poems are about the First World War and two of them seem to have a negative attitude criticising and downgrading the so–called spectacular experience of the First World War. In "Dulce Et Decorum Est" Wilfred Owen seems to mention good aspects of the War but compares them to low– class tragic events. In "Comrades: An Episode" Robert Nichols describes the event of a soldier being badly injured and eventually dying. It describes what the corporals and soldiers did and how ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the second poem, "Comrades: An Episode" the same picture comes to mind by using different techniques. The poem is written in the style of a story, which gives the writer more opportunity to include descriptions and details. In this poem the narrator is the leader of a group of men and he mentions names and, as he knows his men so well, he can create and describe vivid pictures of them, such as "Not to see them: Wilkinson, Stubby, Grim." Other ways he describes his men is by the speech they use regularly. "Who's For the Game?" shows the thoughts that Jessie Pope has towards the war; she views the war as very straight forward and simple; join the army, fight, win, then go home. There is some reality points in the text even though they are understated, such as; 'It won't be a picnic – not much', and 'Come back with a crutch'. This second quote is very misleading, Pope is saying that a crutch is the about the worst thing that could happen when over a million Englishmen died fighting for their country. She uses metaphors in her poem including the title of the poem. In the title "Who's For The Game?" was has been compared to an enjoyable experience making the war seem less scary, and making people become more eager to go. "Dulce Et Decorum Est" has four verses, all of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 58. Turf War Poem Summary The poem by Olivia Wrenn revises the idea of that of "Turf War", which is an empty beauty. But a beauty that will remain because it is fake. An imposter of real grass. The analysis then explains that this is society's fault that has globally poisoned the minds of many human beings. While the poem, than explains the cloned aspects of everything about "Turf War", while the analysis describes imprint's. The poem is almost talking about a Utopian society when it interprets sameness. The equality of all things. Such as the perfectly symmetrical blades of grass and picket fences. Also, the poem unravels the idea of reality of all things. The reality of sameness, the reality of beauty, and the reality of the American Dream. While the analysis barely ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 60. Comparing War Poems 'Exposure And War Photographer' In war poems, war is always condemned, dispraised and demonstrated as a futile and tragic event. In both poems, "War Photographer" by Duffy and "Exposure" by Owen, poets illustrate their suffering and acrimony of conditions of war. "War Photographer" is an inspiration of the friendship of the poet with a photographer of war. It is also an illustration of the brutality of war and the apathy of those who might see the photos in newspapers. Whereas, Exposure is a poem written by a solider who was honoured for his bravery and then was killed in the battle; therefore, Exposure has more authenticity. Both poets show a sense of duty in their poems and they use several imageries. For instance, in Exposure, Owen conveys physical and mental suffering when he says "Our ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In Exposure, Owen uses a contradiction of cold and warm to express the solider's delusional mind which is demolishing from hypothermia. Likewise, in War Photographer, Duffy demonstrates a contradiction between rural England and nightmarish ware zones. In War Photographer, encampment reinforces the sense of chaos and anarchy of the world, whilst in Exposure, Owen uses a burden in the first, third, fourth and final stanza with a short half line, "But nothing happens", which creates a circular structure implying never–ending suffering. Moreover, Owen heightens our awareness of the conditions under which men ludicrously suffer by his application of alliteration and personification. Furthermore, he presents war with a picture of communal endurances, togetherness, and courage by the use of repetition of pronouns, "we" and "our". On the other hand, the poetic techniques that Duffy implies is mostly hallucinative imagery. In Exposure, Owen uses a regular pattern of ABBA, which creates the sense of status and an emphasis on monotony. Whereas in war photographer, the rhyme encourages the idea that he is trying to bring order and demands to a chaotic ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 62. War Poems : War Poetry Soldiers often pay the ultimate price for a nation's security. Fighting in battles throughout the centuries leads to countless deaths that define a country. In many nations soldiers often fall while enforcing their countries policies. There is no way possible in which a nation can thank a family of a fallen soldier enough. Death of a soldier leaves a nation with a vein of guilt deep within the core of the country. War poetry immortalizes the death of these soldiers in an attempt to forget about the brutality of conflict and to remove the grief that comes from sending your nation's sons and daughters into combat. War poetry immortalizes soldiers in an attempt to keep the nation moving forward, to gain closure, and to paint a heroic image of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Heroism is common theme of war poetry. A heroic image serves as an aid in advancing the closure of the families, by offering that their sons died honorably. Immortalization of soldiers' deaths as heroic have helped justify the recruitment of a nation's youngest adults for centuries. War poetry by different authors all seem to follow the same theme. In "Dead of '92" the author, Arthur Rimbaud, draws reference to the nobility of death of soldiers and to the immortalization of the fallen. In the following quote, "Oh soldiers, sown by death, your noble lover, in our old furrow you regenerate" the authors use of the word "noble" once again paints a picture of honor associated with death of soldiers (Rimbaud 8). Furthermore, the use of the word "furrow" references a trench or a crack. A trench correlates to the crack that a nation feels when their vein of guilt becomes too large. The vein of guilt cracks the nation. In addition to this, the author reference to guilt, the author uses the word "regenerate" leads to the connection of immortalization. By regenerating you can live on forever as does the memory of the soldier in this poem. The soldier lives on for all eternity by regenerating itself in the guilt filled trench of the nation. The nobility of the soldier is immortalized throughout the poem by this line. Immortalization in "Dead of '92" along with many other poems throughout time has helped ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 64. Dulce Et Decorum Est And The Horrors Of War Poem Analysis The long standing expression that "the pen is mightier than the sword" has been repeated often throughout the ages, but it can actually be taken seriously in light of war poetry. Although the soldiers in World War I did not literally fight with swords, their experiences in combat were beyond appalling, and some might say, beyond describable by words. Poetry, however, is a very powerful form of expression, and when written by someone who has experienced the horrors of war, it can deeply convey the grim reality of war. Utilising personal experiences and pre–war ideology, World War I poets Wilfred Owens and Rupert Brookes' were able to recreate the glory and horror of the Great War through their works 'Dulce Et Decorum Est' and 'The Soldier'. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The poet reveals the truthful and confronting depiction of death to the unknowing eyes who haven't witnessed it and do not understand. The poem is told from the memories of a solider, which gives way to haunting and helpless sights. This is in utter contrast to the sonnet written by Brooke who depicts a highly idealistic and patriotic vision of war. Brooke's pleasant image of death on the battlefield exemplified both the popular and the governmental view of war. His optimistic ideology may reflect his lack of experience as he never engaged in direct combat and died within seven months of enlistment. The repetitive use of the noun 'England' emphasises the strong patriotic mood. England is personified as a kind, giving mother and her sons, the soldiers, are seeds, whose death will sow life into the earth of 'foreign fields'. While the poem is centred on death, there is no actual reference or description to the painful reality of death as touched on by Owen. The Solider was valuable to the British government, who used it as a means of propaganda. Thus, it was successful in inspiring loyalty and patriotic love in the masses. Poets intentionally implement figurative language devices to add dramatic effect and to paint a specific mood and tone. Such example is evident in Owen's use of the simile 'his hanging face, like a devil sick of sin'. The simile tries to describe the soldier's dreadful facial appearance as being almost ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 66. Stephen Crane's Poem War Is Kind Prompt: How does Stephen Crane's poem, "War is Kind" convey universal themes reflected in Civil War literature? Universal themes help convey Stephen Crane's Poem, 'War is KInd'. These themes are common among civil war litatureare. Crane uses Warfare, Life at home, and Patriotism. He uses these three themes because they can cover what happened and how people felt during the wars. There is also an ironic tone to the poem because it is difficult to understand war being kind in any way. 'War is Kind' is a poem that focuses on the loss of three women who have lost their lover, father. And son in the war. This expresses the the loss and sorrow that can come from a war. The speaker in the poem used irony as a strategy to convince the reader of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 68. Different Attitudes of the First World War as Expressed... When war first broke out in 1914 the general attitude towards it was patriotism. Many young men grabbed the chance to fight for their country and show the women their braveness, they thought they would come back heroes, however they did not know what happened beyond the cheerful and brave faces seen in the news papers and the blissful time the soldiers had in their letters home. This made many more men go to war. Things gradually changed, death, disease, mud, it had suddenly hit that to fight for your country was not such an honour. Soldiers firstly began to write poetry because poetry was the most important mode of expression for those who were shocked and disillusioned by the realities of the First World War. I will be ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Brooke never knew what life was like in the trenches so all of his poems have a positive attitude towards the war. I am studying a poem by Siegfried Sassoon called 'Base Details'. Sassoon was a gallant officer who won the Military Cross as prize for bravery. He hated the massacre that war was and the misconduct of the generals and politicians who made decisions of the war, he thought they did not have the right to decide how or when people die. He protested against war by his poetry and making a statement in The Times. He stopped fighting for the war after he was wounded during the Battle of Arras and was sent home. He lived until 1967. All his poems were negative towards war as he aimed to speak the truth about it. The last two poems I am studying are by a man named Wilfred Owen. Owen is one of the most important poets from the wartime. Once war broke he found a great desire to join in the war effort and became an officer. He was sent home to England after a huge shell burst near him during the war. After this experience his views changed dramatically on the war. He wrote the following to his mother, "That one of Christ's essential commands was passivity at any price! Suffer dishonour and disgrace but never resort to arms." Later on he met Sassoon in 'Craig Lockhart War Hospital'. Sassoon encouraged Owen's poetic writing. I will be studying two of Owen's negative poems. I will begin comparing the poems by exploring the positive attitudes ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 70. Pity And Humanistic Values Of War Poems By Wilfred Owen... Accounts of the World War I were written by British soldiers who had not only experienced and witnessed traumatic events in battle but also depicted them in poetry and prose which suppose to be explored the humanistic values to the readers. Among those works, war poems are spelled out the futility and agony of war in highly intensive way. The paper tries to elucidate the pity and humanistic values of war poems through the select works of Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon. Artistic creation is one of the best of reflecting reality and, at the same time, of perceiving and apprehending it; it is also one of the strongest levelers of influencing the development of humanity. By emphasizing the authentic and pragmatic details of war life of soldiers ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... War is one of the basic aspects of present history and it makes history more interesting. War is the greatest of all the evils invented by humanity; but for countries war matters a lot. There are a lot of differences between the words 'humanity' and the people of a particular 'country'. Since a country makes up for a political entity, it never accepts the domain of humanitarian generosity. War has always caused the deepest remorse and suffering in human history. Almost all the societies, from ancient to the modern times, have undergone the trauma of war and its related pains. The zenith of such destructive force of war was seen in the twentieth century with two massive world wars which rattled the globe and effected unmeasured casualties of all possible kind. The western countries and societies experienced the intense consequences of war in a far reaching scale from the beginning of the World War I to the 1960s. The period from the starting of the World War I to the post–World War II got the attention of the writers, especially poets, playwrights, novelist, artists and other literary critics, since the particular age (1915–1960) was marked by the sufferings caused by the wars, which penetrated into the inner psyche of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 71.
  • 72. Compare the Presentation of War in the Poems 'Dulce Et... Compare the Presentation of War in the poems 'Dulce et Decorum est', by Wilfred Owen and 'Icarus Allsorts', by Roger McGough. Dulce et Decorum est was written by Wilfred Owen and Icarus Allsorts was written by Roger McGough. Dulce was written during WW1. Wilfred Owen wrote this poem while he was in a military hospital. In the poem Owen reveals the chilling truth about what WW1 was really like. Icarus was written in the tension of the Cold War. In the poem Roger McGough turns a very serious (fake) event into a joke. Dulce was written in 1917 and published in 1920. It was written to show that Jessie Pope's poem 'Who's for the Game' was a whole pot of lies. Icarus Allsorts was written in 1964. It was written to get residents of planet Earth ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The tone/mood in Dulce is sad and negative. "In all my helpless dreams, before my helpless sight he plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning." In this quotation Owen is referring to a dream he has had. Also he is describing what is happening in the dream– a man is drowning from gas. He is also having this dream because the things he has seen in war are things that will stick in his head forever. This is sad and negative. In 2012 we have computers, radios, T.V.s etc. and can find out what the conditions were like in any war but back in 1917 when WW1 was going on the only way for a family member to know what their son/dad/nephew/grandson was seeing was through a poem and reading poems like Dulce would make them feel worried and sad. Another difference is the way both poems are written. Icarus is written like a news report. Using a lack of punctuation does this. This stanza is an example of the lack of punctuation used in the poem. "From every corner of the earth bombs began to fly there were even missile jams no traffic lights in the sky in the time it takes to blow your nose the people fell, the mushrooms rose." This lack of use of punctuation makes you read the poem fast this relates to how quick a nuclear bomb can drop and destroy. Also the lack of punctuation communicates the idea that all the events from the poem are occurring simultaneously as the bombs explode. Dulce is written like a diary as it is written in the first person. "I saw him drowning" Also Dulce is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 74. A Mechanized War Poem This poem is my favorite of the three poems we have studied because of the beautiful language and poetic techniques it employs, and because of how realistically it portrays war. The poem captures the horror of troops caught in the middle of a brutal and merciless war, and their desperation. In a mechanized war, attacks take place with frightening speed and intensity, where there is no place to run or hide, and any response is not made out of logic but of pure fear. This hasty and irrational way of thinking fueled only by terror typically only ended in death for both the attacker and the defender, and severe trauma for any survivors. Using a series of present continuous verbs, the poet depicts fast evolving action. He portrays the realness ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Hope is personified as a dying soldier, hiding from the other soldiers, and desperately struggling, trying to grasp onto the mud, but miserably failing. Hope is described and "floundering" in the mud, sinking, drowning, hope itself fighting a losing battle just to survive in the hearts of the soldiers. But the soldiers all know that hope is lost and dead, and woefully plea "O! Jesus, make it stop". The impassioned "O!" symbolizes the terror and pain they are enduring, and this line captures the desperation of these poor soldiers as they try cling onto life, onto their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 76. Songs and Poems Written on Wars: Imagine by John Lennon How lyrics and poetry mirror our thoughts. Poetry is a way to express opinions and ideas and this can often be more effectively achieved through song. The Vietnam War also known as the American War was the longest major conflict that Australians have been involved in. It began in 1962 and ended in 1975. The Vietnam War was the cause of the greatest political and social dissent in Australia since World War 1. In 1959 war broke out between communist North Vietnam and democratic South Vietnam. America and there allies, which include Australia, sent thousands of troops over to Vietnam in hope to stop the spread of Communism. In total, approximately, 50 000 Australians served in the Vietnam War from 1962 to 1975. Many of these troops were conscripted, meaning their military service was compulsory. Many songs and poems were written due to the impacts that war has had on society. Songs and poems are able reflect the issues, values, attitudes and beliefs of the Vietnam War in the 1960's and 1970s. Imagine was written by John Lennon in 1971. It was written about the Vietnam War, and the impacts it was having on countries, governments and society. Throughout this song John encourages the listeners to imagine what it would be like without religions, governments or possessions. He then puts forward the idea that without governments and religion that there would be no war, hate or poverty only peace. "You may say that I'm a dreamer But I'm not the only one I hope ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 78. Bruce Weigl´s Poems on Vietnam War To this day the Vietnam War is still considered to be one of the most devastating wars in history and has been a topic of resentment to the American culture thirty–three years after its end. For the American public it's marked as being the point in history where distrust in our government was at an all–time high, mainly because most of the war's carnage was witnessed on television for the first time. For all the bloodshed American and Vietnamese soldiers suffered through, the war has left a perpetual mark not only on the United States but ultimately has left a permanent scar on the soldiers who fought and managed to survive the war. Renowned war poet, Bruce Weigl, like most young American men during the time was only nineteen when he ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Weigl has dug deep into his recollection of the war to produce work that can be thought of as artistically beautiful. It's his aim to find the means, despite everything he's endured, to transcend misery in his poetry. This is done on purpose and allows Weigl to employ a style in his poetry that's dependent on the sound of words, to express an image so openly that the verses depict a genuine emotion that doesn't pose as an insult to readers. Underneath the rubble of his misfortune there is a level of integrity on display that readers can appreciate. Weigl likes to view the world objectively and so does his poetry in a very responsible and accountable manner. A portion of the poetry created by Weigl illustrates a gap between generations. The general belief is that the United States sees what happened in Vietnam from a distance, but for those living in Vietnam it completely altered their lives. Another excerpt from Weigl's memoir expresses this as he reveals the story of a woman he'd met in Vietnam. Titled, "Her Life Runs like a Red Silk Flag" illustrates exactly just how twisted and merciless war can be. The poem introduces Weigl receiving water from a woman who said she had seen her childhood village bombed by planes. She didn't blame him and in her mind she viewed that uneventful day as a horror that will perpetually haunt her for life but Weigl responds clarifying that the real horror is digging inside of him as he writes, "there aren't any words that can ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...