Compare and compare Wilfred Owen and Song for Doomed Youth of Rupert Brooke Anthem. What is the attitude of the poet to war? How do they express these attitudes? Wilfred Owen's "national anthem of desire" and Rupert Brooke's "soldier" opposed war and related issues. Owen accused war as a cause of the huge and painful loss of young men who were killed like animals. He also attacks the church and attacks to preserve human life and dignity most of the time, which means that it can not do anything in the situation of war, that is not a problem.
In this article we compare Owen's view that war is a wasteful way and young people of destiny, a famous poem written by Wilfred Owen on the theme of fear of war. It was in September and October 1917, Owen was in the hospital. In the form of Sonnet, ANTHEM FOR DOOMED YOUTH is a judgment of elegy, pity for the deceased, Owen war experience, not an explanation of experience itself. It is a short poem of two poems written at World War I and the exposition, leading the reader to the cruel battle of the First World War.
In this article I decided to analyze the two writings of his writings in World War I and the poem Wilfred Owen, a war poet taken from a poem by Jesse Pope. Wilfred Owen's poems ("Dulce et Decorum Est" and "Doom for Doomed Youth") both depict the painful feelings of Owen's war, but the way they are different. On the other hand, the Pope's poem ("Who is the game?") Stood up supporting the war. Poetry is fundamentally different in terms of themes, so it is natural that rhymes and languages used are completely different.
In 1917, British poet Wilfred Owen drafted poetry at Clay Rockhart War Hospital near Edinburgh. Owen was sent to the hospital after the bomb attack at the battle of Somme. In a hospital, he just met an old poet Siegfried Sassoon who just published his book "Old Huntsman" (1917); his direct and firm style told Owen something similar to his work I made it so. Characteristics, the draft shows that Sassoon participated in the editing of the poem
In contrast, the next two verses, written by Wilfred Owen, "Dulce Et Decorum Est" and "Forom For Doomed Youth" detail the fear of the war of the end war, the fear of war. It is already known. Wilfred Owen was the Captain of the British Army and saw the war with his own eyes. He wrote poetry on his deadly experience and opinion in the First World War. This is the opposite of Rupert Brook who saw no fight. Wilfred Owen wants to separate war from the honor and patriotism that the media gave at that time. In "Dulce Et Decorum Est", when the reader first reads the title of a poem, "Dulce Et Decorum Est" is part of the sentence "Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori", so it is considered that patriotism is strong I will. It is "in this poem, Wilfred Owen details the situation of a poor soldier who painfully died as a result of a gas attack.