Beach Burial Beach Burial said that the man died and was buried. This is a fair evaluation of this poem. Beach Burial is a poem about many problems. It is not just about male death and burial. This is by no means a fair evaluation of this poem. In fact, this poem deals with the problem in war. It includes a hidden meaning, equality. This poem is full of war problems. It shows how high the death toll on both sides is. Slessor uses "dead sailor team" to show that all these bodies are very similar, and the movement and emotion are the same.
Similar concerns about viewpoint issues are also the focus of Beach Burial. In this case, as with the two timers, two views were taken. In the burial of the beach, whichever side of the war appears, there may be ironic irony that all the participants eventually express to the shore and time passes. In stark contrast, however, William Street did not use time as a means of conveying ideas, presented the original reality and showed how the poet transcends stereotypes. This is almost the same as capturing the stereotype of Dan, the image of poetry, thinking that he is the nature of the stereotype of Australian poetry. But as Sressor's work shows, Australian poetry is not an idiomatic description of all idioms and inlands. There is extra depth. There is no other problem that is more general than time and life
There is no prosody because Beach Burial has a harsh reality aspect. Beach Burial is not meant to entertain readers, but to mourn the deaths of thousands of soldiers who fought in our country. However, text has many examples of semi rhymes that keep poetry flowing. One example is the phrase "soft and discreet". This is used to explain how dead seamen go to the coast. I can not expect to open war songs with the phrase "soft and humble". In this way, Slessor drew attention of the audience without improving his "sound" without explaining the odd beginnings. In sharp contrast to "cannonball", it produces "soft and dimly effective" sparingly. This creates a quiet and devout voice.