Thursday, May 30, 2019

Dulce et Decorum Est :: English Literature

Dulce et Decorum EstWilfred OwenOwens poem Dulce et Decorum Est is a passionate expression of outrageat the horrors of state of war and of pity for the young soldiers sacrificed init.From the title of this poem people back al-Qaeda would have expected anunderstanding poem, helping to overcome their grief at the loss of aloved one, instead what they got was a poem expressing outrage at thelies surrounding the Great War.The quote by Horace translates as It is sweet and rightly to die forones country, but the poem is about proving to people at home thatthis isnt a sweet and honourable way to die (if thither is any). Itgoes through the worst parts of the war and describes them in detail.The horrors in these descriptions contradict the glorification of thewarThe poem consists of four stanzas, the first describes the soldiers,the second a liquid attack, the third Owens nightmares and last anaccusation to the people back home.Owens poems are suff apply with the horror of battle, and yet finelystructured and innovative.The first stanza sets the scene as it describes the conditions the menfought in and their feelings.Owen immediately shocks the readers by describing the young soldiersas bent double emphasising their exhaustion and the way they slumpalong, deformed by fatigue, I cypher this is an effective similebecause no one back home will be expecting their proud soldiersdescribed as beggars. The simile coughing like hags was usedbecause the men who went into battle were relatively young, yet afterbattle they looked old and ugly, hence hags. With this one sentenceOwen implies health conditions that no one at home would ever dreamof. Words like Hags, Cursed and Haunting are used as they all haveconnotations of evil to emphasise the misery and cogency of the frontlines. Owen chooses his word carefully using ones the readers willunderstand to describe processes they cant, Drunk with fatigue(Line 7), comparing the effects of organism drunk to being overly tired,for example the wavering walk, tripping and stumbling. This iseffective because everyone reading would know what its like to bedrunk. The tired, outstripped Five-Nines being a type of gun, but overly the soldiers being sent from the trenches for some rest andrelaxation. He uses words like We, Our to show that he is part ofthis mayhem. He seems almost detached as if he has seen this sooften, that to him it has lost the horror value that we feel.In the second stanza there is a dramatic change in pace to demonstrate

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