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Analysis Of Wilfred Owen 's ' Dulce Et Decorum Est

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Wilfred Owen was born in Oswestry, England, on March 18, 1893. He became widely recognized as a British poet for his experience and impressions upon World War I. He was the eldest out of the four in his family. His father worked on the railway, and his mother was strict in her religious beliefs, yet still had affection for her children. At Owen’s christian household, they practiced biblical themes and teachings. They seem to be a very close-knit family and protect each other. He also utilized Christian imagery in his poetry as well as strengthening his faith in his religion. After serving in the war regiment for eight months, he teamed up with a fellow officer to design an improvement of the gas mask. Then a year later, he wrote the poem “Dulce Et Decorum Est,” in which an episode of the lethal gas occurs that kills soldiers. According to the Encyclopedia of World Biography it says, “Although the poem describes the senseless horrors of war, its title ironically evokes a Latin quotation from Horace: "Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori," or "Sweet and decorous it is to die for one 's country."” When he suffered a concussion from a fall and later was diagnosed with shell shock and trench fever, he went back home to England for further care. His own impression of the war reveals to be bitter since he struggled a lot and was injured severely. At that time he was recovering, Owen met “Siegfried Sassoon, an army captain and an established poet who wrote passionately of his

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