Is it related? Author: Siegfried Sassoon "Carry on this matter" is ironically also a poetry of war, a famous World War I poet and Siegfried Sassoon was created in 1917. In the first reading, the poet seems to be talking to an injured soldier who came back from the trench, but when asking if the person is important, he lacks limbs and sight. His painful treatment This poem is written in a nursery style style with an obvious rhyming pattern and a distinctive rhythm and many of them have the same number of syllables.
My favorite is "Is it related?" By Siegfried Sassoon, it works best for me, because I think ironic and sarcastic tone makes it very painful, but that is true. This is very easy. I think the repetition of the title is very effective. Because it summarizes the whole poem, gives a structure, and intrigues the readers. The end of the First World War destroyed and destroyed the lives of millions of people, but they always remember, like poetry by Wilfred Owen and Siegfried.
We analyze how to enhance the information of the language written language text. In this poem, "Is it important?" And "The survivor" poet Siegfried Sassoon can strengthen the misunderstanding of noncombatants against the reality of war. This is Sassoon using different language skills such as rhetorical question, iteration, and onomatopoeia. Rhetorical questions are used to reinforce the misunderstanding of noncombatants about the reality of war in this poem. Asking Siegfried's lecture "Whether it is important" reflects the fact that noncombatants can not see the real impact of war on soldiers. This makes the noncombatant's misunderstanding of the reality of war even worse because the soldiers have lost their feet, eyesight, dreams from pits every evening. However, noncombatants can not understand the influence of war victims on their own countries.
The first man of the three great war poet was Siegfried Sassoon. Sassoon was born on September 8, 1886 at Weirleigh in Kent State, England. Siegfried Lorraine Sassoon is the second son of Alfred and Teresa Sassoon. At the age of 5, Sassoon began to struggle when parents broke up. Sassoon went to the university of Marlborough College for a year and then moved to Cambridge's Clare College. In Cambridge, Sassoon is studying law and history, but he has not learned EA.