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Comparing Wilfred Owen's Poetry

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Wilfred Owen and Lord Alfred Tennyson, are two of the most critically and publically acclaimed war poets. Both use language and stylistic features to communicate the vastly juxtaposing ideas of the honour and horror of war.

Owen in both of his poems Dulce et Decorum Est and Anthem for doomed youth showcase the horror of war. Both poems follow Owen experiences in the trenches in northern France in World War One. Both poems heavily feature alliteration with “watch the white eyes writhe” in Dulce et Decorum Est, similarly in Anthem for Doomed Youth “rifles rapid rattle”, creates rhythm and flow to the poem. Furthermore, both poems feature heavily with similes with “like old beggars under sacks, likewise Anthem for doomed youth “What passing-bells for these who die as cattle” as a rhetorical question indented to create a grotesque image and make them question war as a whole. While In Dulce et Decorum Est with Owen “coughing like hags” comparing the men to old, ugly women, they have lost their youth and with it their masculinity and strength. Owens in both poems …show more content…

Both poems featured heavily with Imagery, Tennyson “mouth of hell”, giving death a human or animal like feature and showcasing the bravery of the soldiers. On the other hand, Owen “if you could hear, the blood come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs”, showing a grotesque image of the war. Personification is incorporated in both of the poems with Tennyson using “jaws of death”, turning death into a character and praising the bravery of the soldiers. While a stark contrast to Owen using personification to describe “clumsy helmets”, giving the inmate objects a human quality as they are hard to get on and becomes the reason one man is gassed. While purpose varies for both poets, they both use similar language and stylistic techniques to push their

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