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War in Poetry

Since before man could begin to remember, war has been an omnipresent course of action as conflict has been, and still is, wide spread throughout the world. War is seen by some as a grim evil, while others perceive it to be a brave and glorious feat. These conflicting views have been the themes behind many works of literature, especially many works of poetry. In these poems the poets try to convey their beliefs of war using many different literary elements, such as imagery and tone. In the poems “Dulce et Decorum Est” by Wilfred Owen, and “The Charge of the Light Brigade” by Lord Alfred Tennyson, two contradicting and different view towards war are portrayed through the authors’ uses of imagery and tone. In “Dulce et Decorum Est” Owen paints a pessimistic picture of what war really is like. Owen himself lost his life fighting for the British during WWI in 1918, the poem being published posthumously two years later. He describes the treacherous lives the soldiers lived while fitting in the war. He describes the weak physical and emotional conditions they experienced as they made there way through the mud and sludge. As the poet he gives an accurate portrayal of the negativity of war to reader, this is mainly done in his description of one solider who cannot affix his gas mask in time to thwart off a gas attack. His vivid description of this soldier’s painstaking death illustrates the horrors of war. His pessimistic tone is exemplified at the end of the poem where he contradicts the old Latin saying, Dulce et decorum est Pro patria mori, “It is sweet and fitting to die for one’s country” by labeling it an “old lie”. Contrary to Owen’s views towards war, Lord Alfred Tennyson gives a more optimistic view of war in his poem entitled “The Charge of the Light Brigade”. Tennyson wrote this poem as part of his duties as Poet Laureate of G...

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