War Poems The popular theme of the poet of the last century was war. Many famous poems are about the two world wars, the Korean War and the Vietnam War. In this article, six war-themed poetry, three of them Wilfred Owen, and three of them consider Australian poets. During World War I, Owen wrote "young song of destiny," "sending", and "ignorant" (1) to express his antiwarlike attitude. Kenneth Slessor's 'Beach Burial', Bruce Dawe's 'Homecoming', and Bruce Beaver's 'Letter XV' are Australian famous war poetry.
Several poets, including Wilfred Owen, participated in the war, took part in the war, and some died like a war in Owen. These poems of "war poets" later referred to indicate direct information about atrocities and destruction of war in the world still believing that war is a hero and pride. Norton further told that he converted the traditional poetry technique to an ordinary one at the "Dulce Et Decorum Est" but in fact it was polluted and reacted to war because it was corrupt. . Advances in the form of Owen and traditional poetry symbolize the collapse of the social value system - this system has been trusted for many years. Owen also showed a terrible image of not being a true, romantic, heroic war to his society, breaking a beautiful language popular in his poetry of the times.
War poetry is a relatively new class of poetry. Stephen Crane and Wilfred Owen are the two poets who witnessed the war and wrote many poems about war and detailed poetry. The similarity between Stephen Clan and Wilfred Owen's war poetry seems to be relatively small compared to important differences between images, symbolism, and impressionists. Stephen Crane was born on November 1, 1871 in Newark, New Jersey. He went to school for the first time after moving to New York later. Klein's father died, her mother returned to New Jersey and died 11 years later. Klein studied for 1 year at Syracuse University in New York and then released the first war poem "Black Knight". Later, the crane suffered a shipwreck on the coast of Florida. And it is the foundation of future books and meet with the prostitution house, the boss of Cora Taylor.
During the war, writers and poets started writing about fear of war rather than glory. The two important war poets are Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen. Wilfred Owen was born in Shropshire in 1893. He signed in 1915, but by 1917 he was bought home because of the shock. He later recovered and returned to France. One week before the end of the war, he wrote many homes and poems before being killed in November 1918. Siegfried Sassoon was born in London in 1886. He joined in 1915 and fought in France. He wrote poetry during the war and after the war