Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Wilfred Owens Poetry and Pity of War Essay -- Wilfred Owen War Poems
Wilfred Owen's Poetry and Pity of War    Through his poetry Wilfred Owen wished to convey, to the general  public, the PITY of war. In a detailed examination of three poems,  with references to others, show the different ways in which he  achieved this    Wilfred Owen was born in Oswestry, 18th March 1893. He was working in  France when the war began, tutoring a prominent French family. When  the war started he began serving in the Manchester Regiment at Milford  Camp as a Lieutenant.    He fought on the Western Front for six months in 1917, and was then  diagnosed with War Neurosis (shell shock). Because of this he was sent  to Craiglockhart Hospital for treatment. In his stay at Craiglockhart  Hospital Wilfred Owen met Siegfried Sassoon. Sassoon was also a poet,  and the two became good friends. The two friends compared and edited  their poems, and Sassoon introduced Wilfred Owen to some publishers.  Whilst he was in Craiglockhart he wrote such poems as "Dulce et  Decorem Est" and "Anthem for Doomed Youth." He used his poems as a  cathartic experience to help him forget and overcome his experiences  on the battlefield.    Through a detailed examination of the poems Dulce et Decorem Est,Disabled  and Anthem for Doomed Youth with reference to other poems by Wilfred  Owen, it can be seen that, although he uses different political forms,  styles, and devices, and he addresses his readers from different  authorial stances, evoking feelings from great anger and bitterness to  terrible sadness; the end result is always the same: he shows the pity  of war.    Dulce et Decorem Est was written by Wilfred Owen whilst he was having  treatment at Craiglockhart, it is one of his most famous poems. Stanza  one sets the scene. Owen takes his ti...              ...there is no glory involved. This  poem gets across the madness of war, and that it must not be  continued.    Owen expresses feelings of bitter hatred for the war, and he lets  those feelings out in Dulce et Decorem est. He is angry that war is  allowed to be continued, that the public are lied to, and the  conditions the soldiers have to cope with. He was in the war himself,  he knew what he was talking about. Owen has a very strong use of  imagery, which I think helps get across his message. Although  sometimes I feel he can be a bit too bitter, and lose the plot  slightly, his poetry is extremely effective. He is asking his reader  just to take some time to think about the war, ignore the propaganda  and see what is really happening. All of this put together conveys the  pity of war, by using graphic imagery, metaphors and similes, and  often use of onomatopoeia.                        
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