Please compare these verses and show me how to fear war. I chose three poems written by Wilfred Owen, soldiers by Rupert Brooke, Duluth E. Decolme Est, Anthem for Dumed Youth. To compare how these verses show fear of war, compare how these verses represent the fear of the world war. I chose three poems, "The Soldier" written by Rupert Brooke, "Dulce et Decorum Est", and "Doomed Youth's National Anthem" written by Wilfred Owen. I chose "Anthem" for "Doomed Youth" and "Dulce et Decorum Est". It is because they are alike and show fear of war.
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.
Please compare how Wilfred Owen and Isobel Thrilling describe fear, pain, inevitable war disillusion in each poem. The two poets I want to compare and contrast in this article are written from different perspectives of war. They write articles about different poems, and Owen is writing about the First World War and the Second Thrill. The two poets were in different circumstances when writing these poems, and the fear returned home, and Owen was in the middle of the action, he was on the battlefield.
These two poems, "Dulce et decorum est" and "Who for the game?" Are very different poems of war. They are all about World War I, but they all have different uses. These poems have similar aspects, but there are also big differences. One similarity between the two verses is that they all have titles that express positive emotions about war. But the title is used in a different way; "Who is the game?" This is an extended metaphor as it is repeated again in the poem. War is compared with a kind of euphemism and a game which is a metaphor.