War has a unique ability to bring many contempted poets to the forefront. World War I was known as the World War I back then was a savage war unimaginable. Rupert Brooke is the first war poet in the UK and a national patriot. His poetry is a precedent for those who follow him. Bruker's extreme opponent Siegfried Sassoon presented a cruel reality depiction of the war and influenced future war authors like Wilfred Owen to write original poems. Isaac Rosenberg was a prewar poet, but the First World War urged him to talk about more powerful themes. This distinction distinguishes him from past writers. Nevertheless ... more content
Another important thing to note is that Brook has never actually experienced battle. That is the main difference between him and other war poets. Therefore, his view is static and it is not affected by the fear of actual war. That is why his belief in God is very strong. He is still innocent and his ideas are not yet affected by reality. If he is alive to fight, his view may change and his poem may be very different for the rest of his life. Another concrete proposal to God is what Brooke said, "And think about this mind All evil will disappear / beat of eternal thought And the same thing is given to the UK "(Brooke, 2186) He is talking about various kinds of resurrection He dies for his own country and can be saved outside for his sacrifice. This means the war of Christ against the heathen when Jesus was forced to sacrifice his body for faith as the British soldiers did for the British in the First World War To do. Apparently Brook believed in God, but he did not separate his love for England from the perspective of the world after death.
Siegfried Sassoon is deemed to be the extreme opposition of Bruker, primarily focusing on denying the concept of blind patriotism and drawing wars in a true modern way. After serving injured, he refused to return to war, but wrote an open letter to protest the length of the war. When he returned to the front, he was injured again. this
Rupert Brooke (1887-1915) died in the First World War and never wrote Siegfried Sassoon's Wilfred Owen, but is often regarded as a war poet. And the harsh reality of the fight drawn by Isaac Rosenberg, he did not have the wrong war management, and the sharp analysis the poet later. "Soldiers" belonged to the early stages of the war, and the people were more optimistic and patriotic in general: during the Easter of 1915, just before the death of Brooke, the poem was St. Paul's Cathedral I was read aloud with a voice. This poetry captures patriotism. Well, here, it is "soldier", its meaning and word analysis.
War has a unique ability to bring many contempted poets to the forefront. World War I was known as the World War I back then was a savage war unimaginable. Rupert Brooke is the first war poet in the UK and a national patriot. His poetry is a precedent for those who follow him. Bruker's extreme opponent Siegfried Sassoon presented a cruel reality depiction of the war and influenced future war authors like Wilfred Owen to write original poems. Isaac Rosenberg was a prewar poet, but the First World War urged him to talk about more powerful themes. This distinction distinguishes him from past writers. Nevertheless ... more content