Notes for students Anthem for doomed Youth                   1 Anthem  -  perhaps best known in the expression "The National Anthem;" also, an                   important religious song (often expressing joy); here, perhaps, a solemn song of                   celebration                     2 passing-bells - a bell tolled after someone's death to announce the death to the world                     3 patter out - rapidly speak                     4 orisons  -   prayers, here funeral prayers                     5 mockeries  -  ceremonies which are insults.   Here Owen seems to be suggesting that                  the Christian religion, with its loving God, can have nothing to do with the deaths of so                  many thousands of men                    6 demented -   raving mad                    7 bugles  -  a bugle is played at military funerals (sounding the last post)                    8 shires  -   English counties and countryside from which so many of the soldiers came                    9 candles  -   church candles, or the candles lit in the room where a body lies in a coffin                    10 pallor -   paleness                    11 dusk has a symbolic significance here                    12 drawing-down of blinds - normally a preparation for night, but also, here, the                  tradition of drawing the blinds in a room where a dead person lies, as a sign to the world                  and as a mark of respect. The coming of night is like the drawing down of blinds.1 DULCE ET DECORUM EST - the first words of a Latin saying (taken from an ode                  by Horace). The words were widely understood and often quoted at the start of the                  First World War. They mean "It is sweet and right." The full saying ends the poem:                  Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori - it is sweet and right to die for your country. In                  other words, it is a wonderful and great honour to fight...