Dreamers Dreamers is a World War I, not a war itself, but a poem about a warrior. The message is that it is regarded as a disliked killer who kills innocent victims. Like people, this poem also contains many ideas, and it is not unilaterally stated that this may be written by observers of war or those directly involved in the war itself. The first two lines of poetry are good examples of people making soldiers and the typical view of the citizens who depict them as "gray lands of dead citizens" is a combat soldier.
The most direct way Anglo-Saxon's audience is drawn into this poem is through dreamer's experience. A dreamer is a person who resembles an audience. He is an Anglo-Saxonese, and he does not have much faith if he believes in Jesus. Through his experience, he found peace. The poet depicts the dreamer as a miserable desperate lonely person. "I have not had many powerful friends on the earth, but they were born of the fun of the world," he said at the end of the poem (25). Because their cultural life is not uncommon, Anglo-Saxon warriors can relate to this. This dreamer is one, and it was for some time before his dream. His despair state is similar to the state of the cross he took from the stump. This poem does not describe dreamer's experience in detail, but it teaches us that he has endured "a lot of desires" (25)
Characteristics of Old English Poem "Dream Dream" are divided into three parts. A dreamer 's first response to his cross - vision, an explanation of Rudd' s unique crucifixion, and a transfiguration and determination of a dreamer trying to save the cross. This poem opens the vision of the dreamer and builds the foundation of the rest of the poem. He saw the cross raised and covered with gold and jewels, but he noticed that there was blood on one side. Lad talked about his experience as a tool for the crucifixion of Christ and began to review it. As I noticed that Christ would be a tree to be crucified, the cross recalls that he was cut down in the forest and took away to the enemy to support the criminal and detailed his emotions. The cross declares that because of its pain and obedience it is heavier than all other trees; it orders the dreamer to teach others what he has seen and heard.