War Poem Essays

  • War Poem about Leaving Love

    504 Words  | 2 Pages

    I can feel her agony deep inside myself too She is on her knees begging Our bond of love is strong, I feel terrible to leave her But I then departed, I gave her my heart Then my journey to the army I started In training now Preparing for a war That will soon be upon us In which my head shall bow For my country or more For months now working Training in long, hard sessions Of every hour, and every day Countless soldiers scream in depression They want to be back home. And when

  • GCSE War Poem

    1636 Words  | 4 Pages

    GCSE War Poem “The Charge of the Light Brigade” and “For the Fallen”, are both poems about war. “The Charge of the Light Brigade” written by Alfred Tennyson on 14th November 1854, describes an event in the Crimean war. Britain and France were concerned that Russia may power southwards, so they attacked Russia at Balaclava. “For the Fallen,” was written by Laurence Binyon on September 1914, during the war with the intention of showing the reader the reality of war, in particular, Binyon

  • The War Poems of Wilfred Owen - Contradicting the Classical Ideas of Heroism and Romanticism

    3248 Words  | 7 Pages

    Contradicting the Classical Ideas of Heroism and Romanticism in Dulce et Decorum est, The Send Off, But I Was Looking At The Permanent Stars, The Deadbeat soldier, Counter Attack, Metal Cases and other War Poems by Wilfred Owen Owen displays the reality of war, atypically shown in 20th century literature. By divulging the secrecies and terrors of brutal warfare, he exposes the superficiality of valor and false heroism; through his vivid writing, he opens the eyelids of his readers and discloses

  • Is Virgils Aenied an anti-war poem?

    2376 Words  | 5 Pages

    Virgil’s Aeneid an Anti-War Poem? Virgil opens the ‘Aeneid’ with the words ARMA virumque cano ( I sing of arms and of men). The central role that war plays in this Roman epic is made apparent from the very first word of the ‘Aeneid’ by the emphatic placing of the word arma at the very beginning of the poem. A fair chunk of Virgil’s ‘Aeneid’ is set on the battle field but its violent and gory descriptions of death and its frequent battles alone cannot make this poem an anti-war poem. Virgil does not merely

  • War Poems and Poets

    3952 Words  | 8 Pages

    peaceful the beginning of a new day. The whole poem has a calm and peaceful feel to it and the poet achieves this by using assonance e.g. "sleeping green" and soft consonants such as "sympathies." Even though the poem has a calm atmosphere, the message that the poet wants to say in the poem is about anger and object to war. The poet comments on the devastating effects war has on the earth and the freedom that it takes away form men. The poem opens describing the "darkness" crumbling "away"

  • Six War Poems and the Theme of War

    883 Words  | 2 Pages

    The first poem i will be discussing is The charge of the light Brigade. Written by Alfred, Lord, Tennyson in 1854. The poem is about the battle of Balaclava in the crimean war which was between Russia on one side and England, France and turkey on the other. The poem is also about battles and the deaths of hundreds of loyal soldiers and the experice of war the writter portrays is very different than lots of the other poems. Through out the poem the writter tells us how great war is despite over six

  • War Poem Essay

    637 Words  | 2 Pages

    World War One has influenced many poets to write their experiences of war. Dulce et Decorum est, by Wilfred Owen, is a poem about the horrid experiences soldiers went through while they were at war. Owen describes the atrocity of a gas attack and the painful mental anguish that was shown on the soldiers face. Rupert Brook’s, The Soldier, describes the patriotism that supposedly accompanies war. His view of war is that dying for your country is the most honorable act of man. The poems have contrary

  • A Poem Analysis Of Hearing That His Friend Was Coming Back From The War by Wang Chien

    1458 Words  | 3 Pages

    In this poem, the poet describes a contemporary war which was more intense than those in the old days and the hopelessness for soldiers to come back from the war. When the speaker got the news that his friend, who saw service in that war, was coming back, he was then in an emotional conflict between the eagerness to see his friend returning from the war and the worry about if his friend was still alive or not because he understood the cruelty of the war. A possible theme of this poem is the senselessness

  • ESSAY ON 3 WAR POEMS

    1154 Words  | 3 Pages

    ESSAY ON 3 WAR POEMS No man wants to go to war and no government wants war but there are many different circumstances that lead to the action of war. Those involved in war will have political and personal views towards it. The First World War was greeted with great enthusiasm and patriotism; however it was the war in which millions died compared to the wars after. In the past 200 years warfare has changed and with this change the ideas on war have changed too. Wilfred Owen, Rudyard Kipling

  • Vietnam War Poem Analysis

    753 Words  | 2 Pages

    Vietnam is known as, “America’s Lost War,” because America did not achieve the end goal of a completely democratic country. Protests and riots broke out over the controversy of sending American soldiers to fight and as a result, the veterans did not receive much recognition when they returned home. However it made a pathway for 21st century warfare. On the occasion of the Iraq war, K.T. Mcfarland, the Deputy National Security Advisor for the United States of America, proposed a statement about

  • Wilfred Owen's War Poems

    1530 Words  | 4 Pages

    Wilfred Owen's War Poems The poems Dulce et decorum est, The Send-off and Anthem for Doomed Youth were all written by Wilfred Owen in response to his experience in WWI. Examine the views and attitudes the poet conveys in at least two of the poems. The two poems Dulce et decorum est and Anthem for Doomed Youth by Wilfred Owen are both set during the First World War and Owen uses them to express his feelings and attitudes towards war. In Dulce et decorum est he describes a gas attack, using

  • Recalling War Poem Analysis

    852 Words  | 2 Pages

    fourth stanza of “Recalling War”, the war is over and the war has turn earth to ugly earth and death is seen everywhere. The line also suggest that the soldiers who were living in the earth now went to ugly earth. Here the term ugly earth means that so many people were dead. “War was return of earth to ugly earth, War was foundering of sublimities, Extinction of each happy art and faith”. The war was the main reason submilities

  • Bruce Weigl's Poems on the Vietnam War

    863 Words  | 2 Pages

    this day the Vietnam War is still considered to be one of the most devastating wars in history and has been a topic of resentment to the American culture thirty-three years after its end. For the American public it’s marked as being the point in history where distrust in our government was at an all-time high, mainly because most of the war’s carnage was witnessed on television for the first time. For all the bloodshed American and Vietnamese soldiers suffered through, the war has left a perpetual

  • The Beauty of Dulce et Decorum est

    781 Words  | 2 Pages

    brings the poem Dulce et Decorum Est to life. Vivid imagery is prevalent all throughout the poem. His tone is of depression, lack of hope and of course sadness and it reveals his message without writing pages of verse. He accomplishes his message very quickly in the poem, and makes the reader feel like they are actually experiencing what the narrator is going through. Through vivid imagery and compelling metaphors, the poem gives the reader the exact feeling the author wanted. The poem "Dulce et Decorum

  • The Writers' Attitudes to War in Three Poems

    1694 Words  | 4 Pages

    Writers' Attitudes to War in Three Poems The First World War was the most destructive ever known. Nearly a million British men were killed and it affected every town and village. The 18-40 male age group was dramatically diminished, which meant nearly a whole generation was wiped out. During the war people got increasing information about the war conditions and the patriotic excitement disappeared. This affected the number of men enlisting. People's attitudes to war depended on their experiences

  • Analysis of Bruce Dawe's Anti-War Poem, Homecoming

    1412 Words  | 3 Pages

    An anti-war poem inspired by the events of the Vietnam War, Homecoming inspires us to think about the victims of the war: not only the soldiers who suffered but also the mortuary workers tagging the bodies and the families of those who died in the fighting. The author, Australian poet Bruce Dawe, wrote the poem in response to a news article describing how, at Californian Oaklands Air /Base, at one end of the airport families were farewelling their sons as they left for Vietnam and at the other end

  • Comparison of Three First World War Poems

    1164 Words  | 3 Pages

    of Three First World War Poems The three poems that I will be studying in this essay are “Dulce Et Decorum Est” by Wilfred Owen, “Comrades: An Episode” by Robert Nichols and “Who’s For The Game?” by Jessie Pope. These poems are about the First World War and two of them seem to have a negative attitude criticising and downgrading the so-called spectacular experience of the First World War. In “Dulce Et Decorum Est” Wilfred Owen seems to mention good aspects of the War but compares them to

  • I have studied poems of World War II. I found that the poems fell into

    1129 Words  | 3 Pages

    studied poems of World War II. I found that the poems fell into two categories, Recruiting Poems and Reality Poems. World War II Poetry I have studied poems of World War II. I found that the poems fell into two categories, Recruiting Poems and Reality Poems. Recruiting poems were those which were written by poets who have never encountered war but were paid to convince the reader, usually in their twenties, to sign up with the army. Reality poems tragic and effective story of what war was

  • How does Duffy’s treatment of themes of war and death involve the reader in the poem ‘war photographer’?

    922 Words  | 2 Pages

    Carol Ann Duffy’s poem ‘War Photographer’ shows the life and actions of a photographer and portrays how unappreciative we are of what the photographer has to see and go through to take photographs. The poem shows that photographers are doing their duty, but we are not reacting to the photographs in the way that we should be. ‘War photographer’ tries to put a point across to make us realise that war is wrong and the public have become hardened to it. War in the media does not affect us as much as

  • Comparing War Poems

    789 Words  | 2 Pages

    Comparing War Poems Died of Wounds and Suicide in the Trenches are two poems, which I will be comparing the similarities and differences, which were written by the same author. Both these poems were written by a person called Siegfried Sasson, who wrote most of his poems during the World War One, which outlined how bad the war was to those at home after suffering from being Shell Shocked. I will be comparing the language it uses, ideas it contains and the way it is structured between both