One of the poems I recently read is "soldiers" of Rupert Brooke. The point of this poem is thanks to the country. I will prove that this is the main problem of my paper handling. The poem "Soldier" is Bruker's view on his possibility of dying outdoors and his idea that foreign countries would benefit from his death. When he saw his death, Brook focused only on the ideas and methods England had offered to him in his life.
"Dulce et decorum est" is totally different, written in response to the emotions expressed in "warrior" and provides us with a tough scene of the reality of soldiers' lives during the war. You explain ways to describe soldiers in inhumane ways ("crooked bows", "ghosts like cough", "drunk") and gas attacks, especially death. There is no glory about war, beauty about death, it is terrible, prolonged, cruel. You also have to think about how poetry changes that tense and people - in the end, blame readers in the last paragraph
It rained when a group of black soldiers headed to the city of Houston on August 23, 1917. They protested their inhumane treatment and retaliated against the death of soldiers. In the evening, 20 people will die, leading to the largest military court in America's military history, eventually killing 19 black soldiers. When the United States entered World War I in the spring of 1917, the Army began construction of several training facilities including the Aviation Training Center, Camp Logan which is about 3.5 miles from downtown Houston . The Logan camp has a particularly noteworthy group: The 24th Infantry Regimental Black Third Battalion. They were a famous Buffalo soldier, the successor to the African American group, fought bravely at the Western border. Municipal officials assured the military that black soldiers would have no problem.
These black soldiers who were influenced by violent discrimination went to the city of Houston for bloody revenge
In the past decade, the use of buffalo soldiers by the US military in the Indian war has begun to demand an important reevaluation of the African American group. In this view, Buffalo soldiers were used as an impact force and accessories for the US Government's powerful expansionist objectives, at the expense of Native Americans and other ethnic minorities. The song "Buffalo Soldier" co-authored by Bob Marley and King Sporty first appeared in the 1983 album "Confrontation". Many Jamaican people, in particular Rastafarian like Marley, have identified "Buffalo soldiers" as an example of a black man with great courage, honor, courage and talent in the field dominated by white people. Despite local race discrimination and prejudice, outstanding performance is still sustained