Saturday, October 12, 2019
Dulce et Decorum est, by Wilfred Owen. Essay -- English Literature
Dulce et Decorum est, by Wilfred Owen.    The First World War was an event that brought to many people, pain,  sorrow and bitterness. Accounts of the war shows that no other war  challenged existing conventions, morals and ideals in the same way as  did World War. Many people touched by the terrror of the war have  written pieces of literature about the massacre that was World War 1,  wishing people to understand the horror and tragedy that befell those  involved. "Dulce et Decorum est", by Wilfred Owen, is one such elegy  that presents to the reader a vivid, horrifying description of World  War 1, aiming to illustrate that war is not romantic and heroic, but a  senseless and devastating event. In this poem, techniques such as  imagery, alliteration, assonance, onomatopoeia and contrast are used  to express Owen's angry and bitter view towards what happened in the  war.    "Dulce et Decorum Est" uses strong images to convey Owen's feelings  about the war, and to force the reader to take his view. Ghastly  pictures of the war occur throughout the poem, largely in the last  stanza, working together to present a vivid picture of the war. These  images, utilised by Owen, show the ultimate irony and the moral of the  poem, that it is not in fact a sweet fate to die for one's country  even though others may think it heroic. This irony is illustrated  using juxtaposition at the end of the poem. The men who enlist are  "innocent", they are "children" who have learned that war is full of  "high zest" and this makes them "ardent for some desperate glory".  These innocent boys are willing to believe the Lie but will think  differently once they experience the war first hand.    Descriptive language is used throughout the poem to evoke specif...              ...rd "drowning" is repeated  twice to imprint on the reader's mind the effect the gas had on the  soldier.    The language used also helps to give a stronger impact on the reader  by involving the use of one of the reader's five senses. In "Dulce et  decorum est", onomatopoeia is used to enhance the effect of the poem,  by involving the reader's sense of hearing. Words such as "guttering",  "gargling" and "choking" are used to emphasise the horrific sounds of  a man dying from gas, as the sounds of the words can be likened to  what they are describing.    The reader's attention does not wander throughout the poem because of  Owen's consistent imagery. By the end of the poem, the reader can  fully appreciate the irony between the truth of what happens in the  trenches and the Lie being told at home. It is this attention to form  and imagery that makes the poem effective.                      
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