Siegfried Sassoon Analysis

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Since the war broke out, World War I has been a topic of major controversy. Not only were millions of lives lost, but the war led to new laws against specific types of unethical warfare. During the war, Siegfried Sassoon was one of many that wrote with hopes to bring an end to the entire conflict. In his poem “’They,’” Sassoon uses satire to effectively express his frustrations with the aimless deaths in the wars. It is important to first look back at Sassoon’s life in order to get a better sense of what motivated him to write this piece. He was born to a “wealthy Jewish family” where “he lived a life of ease before the war” (Damrosch 1166). He wrote regularly, but these writings are only really known due to the recognition of his war poetry written later in life. He enlisted in late 1915, ready to do his part in working to protect his country, however, this outlook would soon change. Just before his regiment shipped out, he got news that his brother, who was also enlisted, died in combat. This was the first of many things that would shape Sasoon’s view of the war. Despite this setback, Sassoon still served as a Commander and displayed extreme bravery on the battlefield, earning a Military …show more content…

He wrote a letter stating, “I have seen and endured the suffering of the troops, and I can no longer be a party to prolonging those sufferings for ends which I believe to be evil and unjust” (24). He used his influence as a soldier and a poet to write so that others may know the atrocities that took place on the battlefront. Hoping that by doing so, he could help bring an end to a war that he believed was “being deliberately prolonged by those who have the power to end it” (Bienen). It was in early 1917, while Sassoon was in London recovering, that he heard a Bishop giving a speech “on the transformative effects of war” (Quinn 24). It was in reaction to this speech that the poem “’They’” was

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