Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Poetry Essay: Dulce Et Decorum Est :: English Literature
Poetry Essay: Dulce Et Decorum Est    Draft Copy    The title of Wilfred Owen's famous World War I poem, 'Dulce Et Decorum  Est', are the first words of a Latin saying which means, 'It is sweet  and Right'. The full saying, which ends the poem, 'Dulce et decorum  est // Pro patria mori', means it is sweet and right to die for one's  country. This was the saying that was commonly understood and used  widely in the propaganda at the beginning of the War. It made war out  to be honourable and heroic. Owen shows in this poem, by depicting the  horror and cruelty of the War, how far the common belief that war was  proud and honourable, was from the truth.    In the first stanza we are introduced to the setting of the poem as  well as to a few of the horrors of the war. The men are leaving the  battlefield and are moving to a place of rest when they are hit by gas  filled artillery shells. It gives a description of how fatigued and  weary the men were and how badly injured many of them were after  spending time in the trenches of the front lines. The image of  tiredness and sleep is introduced in the first stanza phrases such as  'Bent-double' (line 1), 'distant rest' (line 4) and 'Men marched  asleep' (line 5). The men are so tired they turn their backs on the  flares that are sent up to show the bombardiers where to shoot their  shells. Another image that Owen uses that appears in the first stanza  and is seen through out the poem is how there is a lack of  co-ordination and sense. This can be seen by 'Knock-kneed' (line 3),  'limped', 'lame' and 'blind' (line 6) and 'drunk' and 'deaf' (line7).  Owen shows how these men's senses had been numbed by the ghastly  occurrences in the trenches and how these numbed senses cause the men  to not realise they are under attack until it is almost too late.    The second stanza describes the dramatic reaction the men have when  they realise they have been attacked by gas. The ecstasy of fumbling -  shows how desperate the men where to find the odd fitting gas masks,  how a mask was the difference between a cruel death and life. Owen  compares the unlucky man to someone who has fallen in a fire or pile  of lime and is being engulfed by the pain. He is compared to a  drowning man; he is drowning in the gas, in the pain of death. The gas  is so thick that it takes on a liquid appearance.  					  Poetry Essay: Dulce Et Decorum Est  ::  English Literature  Poetry Essay: Dulce Et Decorum Est    Draft Copy    The title of Wilfred Owen's famous World War I poem, 'Dulce Et Decorum  Est', are the first words of a Latin saying which means, 'It is sweet  and Right'. The full saying, which ends the poem, 'Dulce et decorum  est // Pro patria mori', means it is sweet and right to die for one's  country. This was the saying that was commonly understood and used  widely in the propaganda at the beginning of the War. It made war out  to be honourable and heroic. Owen shows in this poem, by depicting the  horror and cruelty of the War, how far the common belief that war was  proud and honourable, was from the truth.    In the first stanza we are introduced to the setting of the poem as  well as to a few of the horrors of the war. The men are leaving the  battlefield and are moving to a place of rest when they are hit by gas  filled artillery shells. It gives a description of how fatigued and  weary the men were and how badly injured many of them were after  spending time in the trenches of the front lines. The image of  tiredness and sleep is introduced in the first stanza phrases such as  'Bent-double' (line 1), 'distant rest' (line 4) and 'Men marched  asleep' (line 5). The men are so tired they turn their backs on the  flares that are sent up to show the bombardiers where to shoot their  shells. Another image that Owen uses that appears in the first stanza  and is seen through out the poem is how there is a lack of  co-ordination and sense. This can be seen by 'Knock-kneed' (line 3),  'limped', 'lame' and 'blind' (line 6) and 'drunk' and 'deaf' (line7).  Owen shows how these men's senses had been numbed by the ghastly  occurrences in the trenches and how these numbed senses cause the men  to not realise they are under attack until it is almost too late.    The second stanza describes the dramatic reaction the men have when  they realise they have been attacked by gas. The ecstasy of fumbling -  shows how desperate the men where to find the odd fitting gas masks,  how a mask was the difference between a cruel death and life. Owen  compares the unlucky man to someone who has fallen in a fire or pile  of lime and is being engulfed by the pain. He is compared to a  drowning man; he is drowning in the gas, in the pain of death. The gas  is so thick that it takes on a liquid appearance.  					    
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