SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 18
Disabled Wilfred Owen
He sat in a wheeled chair, waiting for  dark, And shivered in his  ghastly suit of  grey , Legless, sewn short at elbow. Through the park Voices of  boys rang saddening like a hymn, Voices of  play and pleasure after day, Till gathering sleep had mothered them from him.  HE  not named, as he is one of many Alliteration Repetition The immediate appearance of 'dark', 'grey' , and 'shivered' sets up the isolation of the wounded soldier. It strikes a strong comparison to the warmth of the second stanza. Adjectives to show sadness
About this time Town used to swing so gay When glow-lamps budded in the light-blue trees And girls glanced lovelier as the air grew dim, — In the old times,  before he threw away his knees . Now he will never feel again how slim Girls' waists are, or how warm their subtle hands , All of them touch him like some queer disease.  Alliteration – show Beauty The results of his disability 'before he threw away his knees'  ( L.10 ) The implication that this was a needless loss (sacrifice) is reinforced by  Ll.23-4  where the wounded soldier fails to remember why he joined up, pointing only to a distant sense of duty, and euphoria after the football match.  'Now he will never feel again how slim/ Girls' waists are'  ( L.11  &  L.12 ) Showing not only the physical loss of his arm, but also the psychological scars as the soldier knows he will be shunned by women from now on. 'glow-lamps'  and  'girls glanced'  ( L.8  &  L9 ) Both are linked effectively by the use of alliteration.
There was an artist silly for his face , For it was younger than his youth, last year. Now he is old ; his back will never brace; He's lost his colour very far from here, Poured it down shell-holes till the veins ran dry, And half his lifetime lapsed in the hot race, And  leap of purple spurted from his thigh . 'younger than his youth'  ( L.15 ) The reversal is total. The implication is that his face is now older than his youth. 'He's lost his colour very far from here'  ( L.17 ) this line is an example of one of the great memorable lines written by Owen. It is an example of 'deliberate, intense understatements  –  the brave man's only answer to a hell which no epic words could express…
One time he liked a bloodsmear down his leg, After the matches carried shoulder-high. It was after football, when he'd drunk a peg, He thought he'd better join . He wonders why . . . Someone had said  he'd look a god in kilts .  That's why; and maybe, too,  to please his Meg , Aye, that was it, to please the giddy jilts, He asked to join.  He didn't have to beg; Smiling they wrote his lie; aged nineteen years . ' a bloodsmear down his leg,/After the matches, carried shoulder-high'  ( L.21  &  L.22 ) Again Owen uses irony effectively here. We are already aware that the soldier has lost an arm and his legs, yet we are told that before the War he felt proud to have an injury (obtained on the football field), and to be carried shoulder-high (as a celebration as opposed to helplessness). Concept of reversal is again used: sporting hero to cripple, handsome to 'queer disease' ( L.13 ), colour to dark, warmth to cold. 'a god in kilts'  ( L.25 ) An indication that the soldier was a member of one of the Scottish regiments (repeated in  ll.32-6 ). Also implies that he joined up for reasons of vanity. 'giddy jilts ‘   L.27 ) Scottish term for a young woman. 'Smiling they wrote his lie: aged nineteen years'  ( L.29 ) The sadness of the soldier's plight is heightened. Clearly he was under-aged when he enlisted and therefore is still young.
Germans he scarcely thought of; and no fears Of Fear came yet.  He thought of jewelled hilts For daggers in plaid socks; of smart salutes; And care of arms; and leave; and pay arrears; Esprit de corps; and hints for young recruits . And soon, he was drafted out with drums and cheers.  Another indication that the soldier was a member of one of the Scottish regiments (repeated in  ll.32-6 ).
Some cheered him home,  but not as crowds cheer Goal . Only  a solemn man who brought him fruits Thanked him; and then inquired about his soul.   'Some cheered him home, but not as crowds cheer Goal'  ( L.37 ) Recalls the image of the football match earlier.  L.22  implies that he was carried from the field shoulder-high, possibly as the result of scoring the winning goal. Here, despite having achieved far more, for far greater a loss than a 'blood- smeared leg', the crowd's reception is more hollow. Several recruiting posters used the motif of linking sport to the army, and there were numerous recruiting drives at soccer matches.  Minister/Priest?
Now, he will spend a few sick years in Institutes, And do what things the rules consider wise, And  take whatever pity  they may dole. To-night he noticed how  the womens ’ eyes Passed from him to the strong men that were whole . How cold and late it is!  Why don't they come And put him into bed?  Why don't they come? Exclamation for emphasis Repetition – shows how dependent he is on them and has to wait for the orderlies/nurses 'do what things the rules consider wise'  ( L.41 ) The soldier's meekness is complete.  The fine young athlete has been reduced to a state of dependency on others and helplessness (heightened by the pitiful closing repetition of 'Why don't they come?').  The stanza has him waiting for others to do things for him, he 'spends a few sick years', 'takes whatever pity' others choose to offer him; he is passed over by the women's attentions, as he bemoans the cold and hopes that someone will put him to bed.  'Tonight he noticed how the women's eyes/Passed from him to the strong men that were whole'  ( L.43  &  L.44 )Repeating what the soldier has lost, this time in his attractiveness to the opposite sex. 'Whole' implying that he is incomplete, less than a man.
 
Disabled by Wilfred Owen – example essay! I think that in the poem  ‘ Disabled ’ , Wilfred Owen is trying to convey the real tragedy of war. Many people think only of those killed but reading the poem you remember that many people who were not killed in the war could still have suffered a lot more. In the poem Owen focuses on one young man, a single victim of war. It shows the effect the war has on the young man's life, when on returning from the war he has been maimed "legless, sewn short at elbow“ Owen writes the poem with style. He uses the recruit’s contrasting memories and new views to create the war victim's true feelings   "About this time town used to swing so gay", "He thought be better join in" - he wonders why. "Voices of boys rang saddening like a hymn“.  Where is the   Explanation?
The poem also illustrates how his lifestyle changed dramatically. He was once a great athlete, popular with the girls but now he is in a wheelchair ,  "they touch him like a queer disease", and he notices how "their eyes pass from him to the strong men that were whole".  Explanation? An artist was once eager to paint him but "Now he is old, his back will never brace; he ’ s lost his colour very far from home". He was quite obviously attracted to joining  for all the wrong reasons "It was after the football, when he ’ d drunk a peg", " Someone had said he ’ d look “a God in kilts", "to please his Meg". All these reasons were encouraged by official recruiting propaganda "Smiling they wrote his lie, aged nineteen years".
When he departed for war he was treated like a hero but peoples' reactions were different on his arrival home, "Some cheered him home, but not as crowds cheer goals". Only one person thanked him. The war took away everything in this young man's life and  ‘ Now he will spend a few sick years in Institutes".
Essay ,[object Object]
Remember! ,[object Object],[object Object],[object Object]
Think of a poem about an incident that changed a person ’s life forever.  Show how the poet contrasts life for the subject of the poem before and after the incident. ‘ Disabled’ by Wilfred Owen  is a poem about a young man who is disabled during the First World War and  shows how his life changes  for the worst afterwards. Before the war he is a fit young athlete, popular with the girls and good looking. Afterwards he is confined to a wheelchair, dependent on nurses to care for him at their convenience and ignored by the girls and other people.
At the beginning of the poem we see the young man in a wheelchair, waiting for dark, shivering and listening to the sounds of boys playing; he remembers the things he used to be able to do and his lifestyle before the war. OR: At the beginning of the poem we see the young man  “sat in a wheeled chair, waiting for dark” shivering and listening to the sounds of boys playing; something he used to be able to do before his injuries.
He is not named in the poem and this emphasises the fact that there are so many of these crippled soldiers.  The use of adjectives such as 'dark', 'grey' , and 'shivered' shows the isolation of the wounded soldier. It strikes a strong comparison to the warmth of the second verse.
Point:  Before his injuries, the soldier used to go down town and enjoy himself with his friends.  Evidence:  When down  ‘Town which used to swing so gay’ he would watch the girls who would ‘glance lovelier as the air grew dim’ but now he remembers that he has since thrown ‘away his knees’ which implies it was a foolish thing he did and that as a result he will never again feel ‘how slim girls' waists are, or how warm their subtle hands”  Explanation:  As a result of his becoming crippled he is now ignored by the girls as if he has ‘some queer disease’ and begins to remember the reasons why he joined the Army in the first place.  (This links to the next paragraph about why he joined – vanity, drunk and wanting to please his girlfriend Meg)

More Related Content

What's hot

Dulce et decorum est
Dulce et decorum estDulce et decorum est
Dulce et decorum est
ChristineLYA
 

What's hot (20)

Blake 2
Blake   2Blake   2
Blake 2
 
The rime of the ancient mariner
The rime of the ancient marinerThe rime of the ancient mariner
The rime of the ancient mariner
 
The Tyger, by William Blake
The Tyger, by William BlakeThe Tyger, by William Blake
The Tyger, by William Blake
 
The Prelude by Wordsworth
The Prelude by WordsworthThe Prelude by Wordsworth
The Prelude by Wordsworth
 
The rape of the lock
The rape of the lockThe rape of the lock
The rape of the lock
 
All My Sons by Arthur Miller PPT
All My Sons by Arthur Miller PPTAll My Sons by Arthur Miller PPT
All My Sons by Arthur Miller PPT
 
Othello
OthelloOthello
Othello
 
Blank verse
Blank verseBlank verse
Blank verse
 
Tyger
TygerTyger
Tyger
 
Dulce et decorum est
Dulce et decorum estDulce et decorum est
Dulce et decorum est
 
Dulce et decorum est
Dulce et decorum estDulce et decorum est
Dulce et decorum est
 
The second coming
The second comingThe second coming
The second coming
 
London
LondonLondon
London
 
Do not go gentle into that good night nh (1)
Do not go gentle into that good night   nh (1)Do not go gentle into that good night   nh (1)
Do not go gentle into that good night nh (1)
 
Lord of the Flies by William Golding PPT - Vipul Dabhi
Lord of the Flies by William Golding PPT - Vipul Dabhi Lord of the Flies by William Golding PPT - Vipul Dabhi
Lord of the Flies by William Golding PPT - Vipul Dabhi
 
Othello by William Shakespeare, Notes, Quotes and Analysis by T. Scarsbrook
Othello by William Shakespeare, Notes, Quotes and Analysis by T. ScarsbrookOthello by William Shakespeare, Notes, Quotes and Analysis by T. Scarsbrook
Othello by William Shakespeare, Notes, Quotes and Analysis by T. Scarsbrook
 
Potrait of an artist as a young man
Potrait of an artist as a young manPotrait of an artist as a young man
Potrait of an artist as a young man
 
W. B. Yeats, "The Second Coming"
W. B. Yeats, "The Second Coming"W. B. Yeats, "The Second Coming"
W. B. Yeats, "The Second Coming"
 
William blake - The Lamb
William blake - The LambWilliam blake - The Lamb
William blake - The Lamb
 
"Lord of the Flies" powerpoint
"Lord of the Flies" powerpoint"Lord of the Flies" powerpoint
"Lord of the Flies" powerpoint
 

Viewers also liked

"REFUGEE BLUES" - IGCSE GUIDE
"REFUGEE BLUES" - IGCSE GUIDE"REFUGEE BLUES" - IGCSE GUIDE
"REFUGEE BLUES" - IGCSE GUIDE
englishanthology
 
"THE LAST NIGHT" - IGCSE ANTHOLOGY STUDENT GUIDE
"THE LAST NIGHT" - IGCSE ANTHOLOGY STUDENT GUIDE"THE LAST NIGHT" - IGCSE ANTHOLOGY STUDENT GUIDE
"THE LAST NIGHT" - IGCSE ANTHOLOGY STUDENT GUIDE
englishanthology
 
Robert frost’s out out
Robert frost’s out outRobert frost’s out out
Robert frost’s out out
Amer Minhas
 
The Charge of the Light Brigade by Alfred Tennyson
The Charge of the Light Brigade by Alfred TennysonThe Charge of the Light Brigade by Alfred Tennyson
The Charge of the Light Brigade by Alfred Tennyson
www.MrSedani.co.uk
 
Disabled People Powerpoint
Disabled People PowerpointDisabled People Powerpoint
Disabled People Powerpoint
joshnwaozuzu
 
Representation of disability
Representation of disabilityRepresentation of disability
Representation of disability
Craig Osborne
 

Viewers also liked (20)

"REFUGEE BLUES" - IGCSE GUIDE
"REFUGEE BLUES" - IGCSE GUIDE"REFUGEE BLUES" - IGCSE GUIDE
"REFUGEE BLUES" - IGCSE GUIDE
 
"THE LAST NIGHT" - IGCSE ANTHOLOGY STUDENT GUIDE
"THE LAST NIGHT" - IGCSE ANTHOLOGY STUDENT GUIDE"THE LAST NIGHT" - IGCSE ANTHOLOGY STUDENT GUIDE
"THE LAST NIGHT" - IGCSE ANTHOLOGY STUDENT GUIDE
 
Mental Cases analysis
Mental Cases analysisMental Cases analysis
Mental Cases analysis
 
Frost Out,Out
Frost Out,OutFrost Out,Out
Frost Out,Out
 
Robert frost’s out out
Robert frost’s out outRobert frost’s out out
Robert frost’s out out
 
Refugee blues
Refugee bluesRefugee blues
Refugee blues
 
The Charge of the Light Brigade by Alfred Tennyson
The Charge of the Light Brigade by Alfred TennysonThe Charge of the Light Brigade by Alfred Tennyson
The Charge of the Light Brigade by Alfred Tennyson
 
Disabled People
Disabled PeopleDisabled People
Disabled People
 
Disability Powerpoint
Disability PowerpointDisability Powerpoint
Disability Powerpoint
 
Analysis of The Necklace
Analysis of The NecklaceAnalysis of The Necklace
Analysis of The Necklace
 
Exposure
ExposureExposure
Exposure
 
Exposure pp
Exposure ppExposure pp
Exposure pp
 
Disabled People Powerpoint
Disabled People PowerpointDisabled People Powerpoint
Disabled People Powerpoint
 
The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost PowerPoint Presentation with interactive q...
The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost PowerPoint Presentation with interactive q...The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost PowerPoint Presentation with interactive q...
The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost PowerPoint Presentation with interactive q...
 
Exposure - Wilfred Owen
Exposure - Wilfred OwenExposure - Wilfred Owen
Exposure - Wilfred Owen
 
Futility by Wilfred Owen
Futility by Wilfred OwenFutility by Wilfred Owen
Futility by Wilfred Owen
 
Exposure
ExposureExposure
Exposure
 
Exposure wilfred owen
Exposure wilfred owenExposure wilfred owen
Exposure wilfred owen
 
Representation of disability
Representation of disabilityRepresentation of disability
Representation of disability
 
Representations of Disability
Representations of DisabilityRepresentations of Disability
Representations of Disability
 

Similar to Disabled ppt (9)

Suicide in the Trenches.pptx
Suicide in the Trenches.pptxSuicide in the Trenches.pptx
Suicide in the Trenches.pptx
 
Dulce analysis
Dulce analysisDulce analysis
Dulce analysis
 
Dulce Et Decorum Est Essay
Dulce Et Decorum Est EssayDulce Et Decorum Est Essay
Dulce Et Decorum Est Essay
 
Anthem for doomed youth - Wilfred Owen
Anthem for doomed youth - Wilfred Owen Anthem for doomed youth - Wilfred Owen
Anthem for doomed youth - Wilfred Owen
 
Dulce analysis
Dulce analysisDulce analysis
Dulce analysis
 
War Poetry Presentation
War Poetry PresentationWar Poetry Presentation
War Poetry Presentation
 
Wilfred owen poems inspo for media
Wilfred owen poems inspo for mediaWilfred owen poems inspo for media
Wilfred owen poems inspo for media
 
Learning Object: Analysing and Understanding the Poetry of WWI
Learning Object: Analysing and Understanding the Poetry of WWILearning Object: Analysing and Understanding the Poetry of WWI
Learning Object: Analysing and Understanding the Poetry of WWI
 
Copia de war poems
Copia de war poemsCopia de war poems
Copia de war poems
 

More from rgarofano (10)

RE Literacy Presentation
RE Literacy PresentationRE Literacy Presentation
RE Literacy Presentation
 
The art of_rhetoric
The art of_rhetoricThe art of_rhetoric
The art of_rhetoric
 
Vocab is vital
Vocab is vitalVocab is vital
Vocab is vital
 
HSIE Presentation on Literacy
HSIE Presentation on LiteracyHSIE Presentation on Literacy
HSIE Presentation on Literacy
 
Maths & Literacy
Maths & LiteracyMaths & Literacy
Maths & Literacy
 
Subject SpecificTeminolgy
Subject SpecificTeminolgySubject SpecificTeminolgy
Subject SpecificTeminolgy
 
Futility analysis
Futility analysisFutility analysis
Futility analysis
 
HSC Adavance Modules
HSC Adavance Modules HSC Adavance Modules
HSC Adavance Modules
 
Comprehension Explored
Comprehension Explored Comprehension Explored
Comprehension Explored
 
Anthem for Doomed Youth analysis
Anthem for Doomed Youth analysisAnthem for Doomed Youth analysis
Anthem for Doomed Youth analysis
 

Recently uploaded

R$ 78 milhões: Estado aprova 593 propostas para acordos diretos de precatórios
R$ 78 milhões: Estado aprova 593 propostas para acordos diretos de precatóriosR$ 78 milhões: Estado aprova 593 propostas para acordos diretos de precatórios
R$ 78 milhões: Estado aprova 593 propostas para acordos diretos de precatórios
Maurílio Júnior
 
CaseThe legal victory in the turmeric patent case safeguarded traditional kno...
CaseThe legal victory in the turmeric patent case safeguarded traditional kno...CaseThe legal victory in the turmeric patent case safeguarded traditional kno...
CaseThe legal victory in the turmeric patent case safeguarded traditional kno...
alpha012343210
 
PEACE BETWEEN ISRAEL AND PALESTINE REQUIRES EXTREMISTS OUT OF POWER AND RESTR...
PEACE BETWEEN ISRAEL AND PALESTINE REQUIRES EXTREMISTS OUT OF POWER AND RESTR...PEACE BETWEEN ISRAEL AND PALESTINE REQUIRES EXTREMISTS OUT OF POWER AND RESTR...
PEACE BETWEEN ISRAEL AND PALESTINE REQUIRES EXTREMISTS OUT OF POWER AND RESTR...
Faga1939
 

Recently uploaded (20)

21052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
21052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf21052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
21052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
Have A Complimentary Cheat Sheet, On Us!!!
Have A Complimentary Cheat Sheet, On Us!!!Have A Complimentary Cheat Sheet, On Us!!!
Have A Complimentary Cheat Sheet, On Us!!!
 
May 2024 - Crypto Market Report_FINAL.pdf
May 2024 - Crypto Market Report_FINAL.pdfMay 2024 - Crypto Market Report_FINAL.pdf
May 2024 - Crypto Market Report_FINAL.pdf
 
Meta_AI_ads_investigation.pdfldoljjwejolejolol
Meta_AI_ads_investigation.pdfldoljjwejolejololMeta_AI_ads_investigation.pdfldoljjwejolejolol
Meta_AI_ads_investigation.pdfldoljjwejolejolol
 
Embed-4-3 (1).pdf cvxx'f['df[p'lf][l][fl][fl][][l[
Embed-4-3 (1).pdf cvxx'f['df[p'lf][l][fl][fl][][l[Embed-4-3 (1).pdf cvxx'f['df[p'lf][l][fl][fl][][l[
Embed-4-3 (1).pdf cvxx'f['df[p'lf][l][fl][fl][][l[
 
Minnesota Timberwolves Bring Ya Ass T Shirt
Minnesota Timberwolves Bring Ya Ass T ShirtMinnesota Timberwolves Bring Ya Ass T Shirt
Minnesota Timberwolves Bring Ya Ass T Shirt
 
R$ 78 milhões: Estado aprova 593 propostas para acordos diretos de precatórios
R$ 78 milhões: Estado aprova 593 propostas para acordos diretos de precatóriosR$ 78 milhões: Estado aprova 593 propostas para acordos diretos de precatórios
R$ 78 milhões: Estado aprova 593 propostas para acordos diretos de precatórios
 
CaseThe legal victory in the turmeric patent case safeguarded traditional kno...
CaseThe legal victory in the turmeric patent case safeguarded traditional kno...CaseThe legal victory in the turmeric patent case safeguarded traditional kno...
CaseThe legal victory in the turmeric patent case safeguarded traditional kno...
 
19052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
19052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf19052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
19052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
israeil_bnetaniahou_panel_report_eng.pdf
israeil_bnetaniahou_panel_report_eng.pdfisraeil_bnetaniahou_panel_report_eng.pdf
israeil_bnetaniahou_panel_report_eng.pdf
 
PEACE BETWEEN ISRAEL AND PALESTINE REQUIRES EXTREMISTS OUT OF POWER AND RESTR...
PEACE BETWEEN ISRAEL AND PALESTINE REQUIRES EXTREMISTS OUT OF POWER AND RESTR...PEACE BETWEEN ISRAEL AND PALESTINE REQUIRES EXTREMISTS OUT OF POWER AND RESTR...
PEACE BETWEEN ISRAEL AND PALESTINE REQUIRES EXTREMISTS OUT OF POWER AND RESTR...
 
23052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
23052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf23052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
23052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
Positive Effects Of Social Media On Mental Health
Positive Effects Of Social Media On Mental HealthPositive Effects Of Social Media On Mental Health
Positive Effects Of Social Media On Mental Health
 
Embed-3-1-1.pdf The ECI direction on April 2, 2024 can be read here:
Embed-3-1-1.pdf  The ECI direction on April 2, 2024 can be read here:Embed-3-1-1.pdf  The ECI direction on April 2, 2024 can be read here:
Embed-3-1-1.pdf The ECI direction on April 2, 2024 can be read here:
 
24052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
24052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf24052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
24052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
2024 - Love and Madness - a book about love, madness, heartbreak and politics
2024 - Love and Madness - a book about love, madness, heartbreak and politics2024 - Love and Madness - a book about love, madness, heartbreak and politics
2024 - Love and Madness - a book about love, madness, heartbreak and politics
 
Embed-4-1-1.pdf vm ;sdkp[kdp[kpdkpodp;p;j
Embed-4-1-1.pdf vm ;sdkp[kdp[kpdkpodp;p;jEmbed-4-1-1.pdf vm ;sdkp[kdp[kpdkpodp;p;j
Embed-4-1-1.pdf vm ;sdkp[kdp[kpdkpodp;p;j
 
25052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
25052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf25052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
25052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
Dominican American Coalition PAC Executive Summary
Dominican American Coalition PAC Executive SummaryDominican American Coalition PAC Executive Summary
Dominican American Coalition PAC Executive Summary
 
Encore portal Project PPt on live portal
Encore portal Project PPt on live portalEncore portal Project PPt on live portal
Encore portal Project PPt on live portal
 

Disabled ppt

  • 2. He sat in a wheeled chair, waiting for dark, And shivered in his ghastly suit of grey , Legless, sewn short at elbow. Through the park Voices of boys rang saddening like a hymn, Voices of play and pleasure after day, Till gathering sleep had mothered them from him. HE not named, as he is one of many Alliteration Repetition The immediate appearance of 'dark', 'grey' , and 'shivered' sets up the isolation of the wounded soldier. It strikes a strong comparison to the warmth of the second stanza. Adjectives to show sadness
  • 3. About this time Town used to swing so gay When glow-lamps budded in the light-blue trees And girls glanced lovelier as the air grew dim, — In the old times, before he threw away his knees . Now he will never feel again how slim Girls' waists are, or how warm their subtle hands , All of them touch him like some queer disease. Alliteration – show Beauty The results of his disability 'before he threw away his knees' ( L.10 ) The implication that this was a needless loss (sacrifice) is reinforced by Ll.23-4 where the wounded soldier fails to remember why he joined up, pointing only to a distant sense of duty, and euphoria after the football match. 'Now he will never feel again how slim/ Girls' waists are' ( L.11 & L.12 ) Showing not only the physical loss of his arm, but also the psychological scars as the soldier knows he will be shunned by women from now on. 'glow-lamps' and 'girls glanced' ( L.8 & L9 ) Both are linked effectively by the use of alliteration.
  • 4. There was an artist silly for his face , For it was younger than his youth, last year. Now he is old ; his back will never brace; He's lost his colour very far from here, Poured it down shell-holes till the veins ran dry, And half his lifetime lapsed in the hot race, And leap of purple spurted from his thigh . 'younger than his youth' ( L.15 ) The reversal is total. The implication is that his face is now older than his youth. 'He's lost his colour very far from here' ( L.17 ) this line is an example of one of the great memorable lines written by Owen. It is an example of 'deliberate, intense understatements – the brave man's only answer to a hell which no epic words could express…
  • 5. One time he liked a bloodsmear down his leg, After the matches carried shoulder-high. It was after football, when he'd drunk a peg, He thought he'd better join . He wonders why . . . Someone had said he'd look a god in kilts . That's why; and maybe, too, to please his Meg , Aye, that was it, to please the giddy jilts, He asked to join. He didn't have to beg; Smiling they wrote his lie; aged nineteen years . ' a bloodsmear down his leg,/After the matches, carried shoulder-high' ( L.21 & L.22 ) Again Owen uses irony effectively here. We are already aware that the soldier has lost an arm and his legs, yet we are told that before the War he felt proud to have an injury (obtained on the football field), and to be carried shoulder-high (as a celebration as opposed to helplessness). Concept of reversal is again used: sporting hero to cripple, handsome to 'queer disease' ( L.13 ), colour to dark, warmth to cold. 'a god in kilts' ( L.25 ) An indication that the soldier was a member of one of the Scottish regiments (repeated in ll.32-6 ). Also implies that he joined up for reasons of vanity. 'giddy jilts ‘ L.27 ) Scottish term for a young woman. 'Smiling they wrote his lie: aged nineteen years' ( L.29 ) The sadness of the soldier's plight is heightened. Clearly he was under-aged when he enlisted and therefore is still young.
  • 6. Germans he scarcely thought of; and no fears Of Fear came yet. He thought of jewelled hilts For daggers in plaid socks; of smart salutes; And care of arms; and leave; and pay arrears; Esprit de corps; and hints for young recruits . And soon, he was drafted out with drums and cheers. Another indication that the soldier was a member of one of the Scottish regiments (repeated in ll.32-6 ).
  • 7. Some cheered him home, but not as crowds cheer Goal . Only a solemn man who brought him fruits Thanked him; and then inquired about his soul. 'Some cheered him home, but not as crowds cheer Goal' ( L.37 ) Recalls the image of the football match earlier. L.22 implies that he was carried from the field shoulder-high, possibly as the result of scoring the winning goal. Here, despite having achieved far more, for far greater a loss than a 'blood- smeared leg', the crowd's reception is more hollow. Several recruiting posters used the motif of linking sport to the army, and there were numerous recruiting drives at soccer matches. Minister/Priest?
  • 8. Now, he will spend a few sick years in Institutes, And do what things the rules consider wise, And take whatever pity they may dole. To-night he noticed how the womens ’ eyes Passed from him to the strong men that were whole . How cold and late it is! Why don't they come And put him into bed? Why don't they come? Exclamation for emphasis Repetition – shows how dependent he is on them and has to wait for the orderlies/nurses 'do what things the rules consider wise' ( L.41 ) The soldier's meekness is complete. The fine young athlete has been reduced to a state of dependency on others and helplessness (heightened by the pitiful closing repetition of 'Why don't they come?'). The stanza has him waiting for others to do things for him, he 'spends a few sick years', 'takes whatever pity' others choose to offer him; he is passed over by the women's attentions, as he bemoans the cold and hopes that someone will put him to bed. 'Tonight he noticed how the women's eyes/Passed from him to the strong men that were whole' ( L.43 & L.44 )Repeating what the soldier has lost, this time in his attractiveness to the opposite sex. 'Whole' implying that he is incomplete, less than a man.
  • 9.  
  • 10. Disabled by Wilfred Owen – example essay! I think that in the poem ‘ Disabled ’ , Wilfred Owen is trying to convey the real tragedy of war. Many people think only of those killed but reading the poem you remember that many people who were not killed in the war could still have suffered a lot more. In the poem Owen focuses on one young man, a single victim of war. It shows the effect the war has on the young man's life, when on returning from the war he has been maimed "legless, sewn short at elbow“ Owen writes the poem with style. He uses the recruit’s contrasting memories and new views to create the war victim's true feelings "About this time town used to swing so gay", "He thought be better join in" - he wonders why. "Voices of boys rang saddening like a hymn“. Where is the Explanation?
  • 11. The poem also illustrates how his lifestyle changed dramatically. He was once a great athlete, popular with the girls but now he is in a wheelchair , "they touch him like a queer disease", and he notices how "their eyes pass from him to the strong men that were whole". Explanation? An artist was once eager to paint him but "Now he is old, his back will never brace; he ’ s lost his colour very far from home". He was quite obviously attracted to joining for all the wrong reasons "It was after the football, when he ’ d drunk a peg", " Someone had said he ’ d look “a God in kilts", "to please his Meg". All these reasons were encouraged by official recruiting propaganda "Smiling they wrote his lie, aged nineteen years".
  • 12. When he departed for war he was treated like a hero but peoples' reactions were different on his arrival home, "Some cheered him home, but not as crowds cheer goals". Only one person thanked him. The war took away everything in this young man's life and ‘ Now he will spend a few sick years in Institutes".
  • 13.
  • 14.
  • 15. Think of a poem about an incident that changed a person ’s life forever. Show how the poet contrasts life for the subject of the poem before and after the incident. ‘ Disabled’ by Wilfred Owen is a poem about a young man who is disabled during the First World War and shows how his life changes for the worst afterwards. Before the war he is a fit young athlete, popular with the girls and good looking. Afterwards he is confined to a wheelchair, dependent on nurses to care for him at their convenience and ignored by the girls and other people.
  • 16. At the beginning of the poem we see the young man in a wheelchair, waiting for dark, shivering and listening to the sounds of boys playing; he remembers the things he used to be able to do and his lifestyle before the war. OR: At the beginning of the poem we see the young man “sat in a wheeled chair, waiting for dark” shivering and listening to the sounds of boys playing; something he used to be able to do before his injuries.
  • 17. He is not named in the poem and this emphasises the fact that there are so many of these crippled soldiers. The use of adjectives such as 'dark', 'grey' , and 'shivered' shows the isolation of the wounded soldier. It strikes a strong comparison to the warmth of the second verse.
  • 18. Point: Before his injuries, the soldier used to go down town and enjoy himself with his friends. Evidence: When down ‘Town which used to swing so gay’ he would watch the girls who would ‘glance lovelier as the air grew dim’ but now he remembers that he has since thrown ‘away his knees’ which implies it was a foolish thing he did and that as a result he will never again feel ‘how slim girls' waists are, or how warm their subtle hands” Explanation: As a result of his becoming crippled he is now ignored by the girls as if he has ‘some queer disease’ and begins to remember the reasons why he joined the Army in the first place. (This links to the next paragraph about why he joined – vanity, drunk and wanting to please his girlfriend Meg)