Wilfred Owen's Team Battle Wilfred Owen destroyed the proudly soldier image "Vent Double" like the old elder. Below these heavyweight backpacks. Owen put this in this poem and showed their purpose to the volunteers, and it is not just the fun in her poetry and the "game" of Jesse Pope. Owens said that the soldiers would continue doing something ", cramped and bloodshed.
In this article I decided to analyze the two writings of his writings in World War I and the poem Wilfred Owen, a war poet taken from a poem by Jesse Pope. Wilfred Owen's poems ("Dulce et Decorum Est" and "Doom for Doomed Youth") both depict the painful feelings of Owen's war, but the way they are different. On the other hand, the Pope's poem ("Who is the game?") Stood up supporting the war. Poetry is fundamentally different in terms of themes, so it is natural that rhymes and languages used are completely different.
Wilfred Owen was a war poet of the First World War and was born in 1893. He died in 1918 and fought in the "Great War". He wrote his poem as a soldier injured while sitting in a hospital bed. - In this article you will notice the differences and similarities between "Like of Light" and "Dulce Et Decorum Est". "Light Brigades Accident" was written by Sir Alfred Denny in the 19th century. In contrast, "Dulce Et Decorum Est" was created by Wilfred Owen in the 20th century. The main resemblance we observed was that they all captured the wartime experience.