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A Comparison in the Ways Owen, Brooke and Sassoon Portray World War One in Their Poetry

2023-09-22 04:53:49

Poems of Owen, Brook, Sasoon, who drew a way in which World War I was compared in the First World War between 1914 and 1918. During the war, Owen, Sasoon, Brooke was a poet and a soldier. But because of their different experiences, their poetry has many similarities and differences. Owen and Sassoon actually participated in the war and Brooke never entered the battle when he died on a malaria ship. The audience of different verses is different. The audience of Owens is a person who wants to participate in the war.

Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Saghnan war poet Wilfred Edward Salvat Owen MC 2nd battalion Manchester Legion, 18th March 1893, Oswaldo Shropshire Born Stirley he is Birkenhead Institute and Shrewsbury Technical I was educated at School. Wilfred Owen is the largest of the four children, the son of a railroad official. - Thomas Hardy (June 2, 1840 - January 11, 1928) is a British writer who thinks himself as a poet. Most of his work is concentrated on the semi-imaginary land of Wessex. In 1898, Hardy published a poem collection written for more than 30 years, but Wixex poetry is his first poetry collection. Hardy's wife, Emma Ravinia Gifford, got married in 1874. He was alienated from his wife, his wife died in 1912; her death caused trauma to him

Poems of Owen, Brook, Sasoon, who drew a way in which World War I was compared in the First World War between 1914 and 1918. During the war, Owen, Sasoon, Brooke was a poet and a soldier. But because of their different experiences, their poetry has many similarities and differences. Owen and Sassoon actually participated in the war and Brooke never entered the battle when he died on a malaria ship. The audience of different verses is different. - In the mines community of Wales, which once flourished, these two verses are about death and loss of loved ones. The first poem by Mike Jenkins is a memory of a tragic and sudden son's deceased father in Abrahan in 1966 when many young people were living in 1966. Lost. The second poem, written by Duncan Bush in 1995, was written when he was suffering from pneumoconiosis, so the name of his poetry