In this article I will explain how the verses Dulce Et Decorum Est and Light Journey represent war. I will discuss the theme of death, emotion, situation, and opinion. In Dulce Et, death manifests as fear and terrible pain. "His face is like a demon and hates sin." This metaphor explains how the poet Wilfred Owen see men's suffering. He used an effective figurative approach, "The devil is tired of sin", it is a metaphor that shows how death death is.
The theme of "Dulce et Decorum Est" is related to the Latin title. This was cited from the work of the poet Horace (AD 658). The complete phrase (used to close Owen's poetry) destroys the most important patriotism of Darce and Decorat, which can be roughly translated. The dissidents' statements are a shame of death in modern war. Readers who have some understanding of classical literature, especially heroic epics and great warriors fighting for that country will soon see Owen's strategy. The people he explained in this war is nothing but a nobleman. Soldiers in Owen's poems retreated from the front rather than fighting enemies in one battle. They are tired both physically and mentally. They barely hear the sound of a bomb that can kill most of their lives.
Perhaps the most famous contemporary usage of this sentence is the title of the poem "Dulce et Decorum est" by British poet Wilfred Owen during the First World War. Owen's poetry describes the gas attack during the First World War and is one of his many anti-war poems that were not announced until the end of the war. In the last few lines of this poem, Horatian phrases are expressed as "ancient lies". People believe and use the original of that poem to explain that Owen is trying to ridicule the poem by Jessie Pope (who praised the war and recruited in a simple patriotic poetry). "Little partner" who is enthusiastic about charging and shooting. Like "phone"