Monday, September 2, 2019
Compare and contrast the styles and techniques of two of the Wilfred :: English Literature
Compare and contrast the styles and techniques of two of the Wilfred  Owen poems you have studied to demonstrate the poet's attitude to war    Wilfred Owen was a war poet from the First World War; he was born in  1893 and died in 1918, whilst fighting in the "Great War". He wrote  his poetry while sitting as an injured soldier on a hospital bed, and  many say this is where he developed his flair for writing. In this  essay, I have decided to analyse two poems; "Dulce et Decorum est" and  "Anthem for Doomed Youth". In my opinion both of these poems portray  Owen's anger towards the war, but do so in very different ways. I am  going to compare and contrast the two poems, so that I get a better  idea of Owen's attitude to war.    Themes are important to any poem because it is what they are about.  The main theme in "Dulce et Decorum est" is that it is not a glorious  thing to fight for one's country; it is actually a horrific and  traumatising experience. This is ironic because the name of the poem  translates to "It is a glorious and honorable thing to fight for oneââ¬â¢s  country". I think Owen has done this so that he can lead up to the  last line where he is urging people back at home to cease telling  their children the "old lie" and to me this is effective. Stanza three  is writing about the tragedy of war; it says "Obscene as cancer", and  I think this is a useful simile because it is something that people  back at home, reading the poetry, could relate to. Another theme of  this poem is death; there are many occasions in which Owen talks about  death. I have chosen "guttering, choking, drowning" as an example  because it portrays an image of a horrific and painful way of dying.  Another example of death is ââ¬Å"white eyes writhing in his face, his  hanging faceâ⬠ this is effective to me because the use of repetition  emphasises the state in which the soldier is in, and draws a vivid  images in the readers mind. I think these themes show that Owen has a  bitter attitude towards war because he seems to only mention a bad  side of war as if there is no glorious part.    The main theme in stanza one of "Anthem for Doomed Youth" however is  the lack of a funeral for people dying in the war. An example of this  is "choirs of wailing shells"; this means that the only choir they  have when they die is the sound the shells make as they move through    					    
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