Wednesday, September 4, 2019
What do you learn about the First World War from your reading of :: English Literature
What do you learn about the First World War from your reading of  Wilfred Owens poetry?    From Wilfred Owens poems you can learn so many different things. He  was one of a group of soldiers, he wrote about the war as he  experienced it. So all of his poems are primary evidence because the  poems were wrote by him when the war was going on.    We can prove that Wilfred Owen was in the War by using a quote from a  poem he wrote. The poem is titled 'Dulce et Decorum Est'. In the poem  he gives his opinion on war. He says    "Dulce et decorum est Pro Partria mori"    This means it is good and beautiful to die for your country. He wrote  it in Latin, the rest of the poem is english. By using Latin I think  it creates a distinguished impact on the reader. It draws their  attention to it. Honestly, Wilfred Owen does not believe it actually  is good to die for your country. He is being critical.    The opposition to this view of war would be a poet named Jessie Pope.  Wilfred Owens and Jessie popes' poetry is very different, Jessie  Popes' is usually more of a poem to recruit soldiers and get the point  across that if you fight for your country war is good. Wilfred Owens  poems are far more descriptive and appeal to the senses, giving us an  insight on life in world war one.    In the poem 'The Sentry' he appeals to the senses by describing the  weather as "water falls of slime" and describing the smell    "Stank old and sour."    We can learn from this poem that physical conditions in the war were  awful.    There would be high danger of dying and injuring yourself because  bullets were being shot everywhere and gas attacks were occuring  frequently.    "Gas! Gas! Quick, boys!"(From Dulce et Decorum Est)    We learn how the gas attacks effect the soldiers in the poem 'Dulce et  Decorum Est' there is a section in the poem where Wilfred describes a  gas attack.    "Dim, through the misty panes and thick green light, A under a green  sea I saw him drowning."    The misty panes were Wilfreds eyes; they were misted because of the  gas in the air. He describes the colour of the gas as 'green' and the  amount of it as a 'sea' so it spreads quite a distance and widths as  seas are generally known for being large. Green is known as the colour  of envy and maybe the gas is representing the opposisitions jealously  towards the enemy that they are winning.    In this poem Wilfred describes what the soldiers are like in their    					    
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