Dulce Et Decorum Est Analysis Essay

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From the start, “Dulce et Decorum Est” is straightforward poem, a retelling of a life lived in fighting. As Wilfred Owen recounts his story, it sends a strong message of a soldier who has lived through hell and is singularly opposed to war, showing his distaste in the form of a poem. Owen’s poem is an anti-war story, designed to shame and dissuade the people who are pro-war by using images and memories of war. In the last stanza of the poem, we see that he is retelling this ugly story to someone, letting his friend see the horrors of war and imploring them not to give the responsibility of death and destruction to young impressionable children. There isn’t a specific person mentioned, but it is implied that the person Owen is narrating to is a close friend or relative, once calling him “my friend”. Though, this doesn't necessarily mean that they are particularly good friends, and as a result Owen is using his time in the war to convince his friend into an anti-war mindset. It is clear that these soldiers are not high ranking soldiers of any value, but expendable, the war turning them into dead men walking. For example, many are disabled and wounded as Owen recounts “all went lame; all blind...deaf even to …show more content…

The use of colors helps us see the importance and vividness of war, letting us see into a very real world that we can only imagine. Safe at home, it is hard to imagine the hellish things that happen, easy to give the responsibility of war to someone else or to hand it off to the next generation. But that is the entire point of this poem, Owen’s attempt to shake us out of that destructive mentality, to shoulder the obligation instead of putting it

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