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The Happy Connotation Of Wilfred Owen's Anthem For Doomed Youth

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Anthem for doomed youth. This is by placing “Anthem” besides “doomed youth” which juxtaposes the happy connotations of ‘anthem’ with the negative connotations of ‘doomed youth’. Through this he stresses the pointless of his subject and the pointlessness of war by calling readers to question the patriotic anthems they sing for their soldiers. The octave begins with the rhetorical question “what passing bells, for these who die as cattle?”, which stresses the pointlessness of sending innocent men to war only to be slaughtered as cattle. furthermore, the use of “passing bells” hints at cowbells and symbolizes that the death of the soldiers will be similar to that of a cow slaughtered. Ultimately, Owen’s clever control of the sonnet structure …show more content…

The personification of “wailing shells” is linked to “demented choirs” to help responders feel the trauma of the war for all these included. Therefore, Anthem for Doomed Youth emphasizes that the nature of war and the amount of loss was so horrific, that many people couldn’t cope with the trauma and lost faith.

Dolce et Decorum Est aims to expose the flaccidities of propagandas in England regarding the nature of death in war. The hyperbolic exaggeration, “all went lame, all went blind” stresses common ____. It shows that every soldier shares the camaraderie of pain and incapacitation rather than glory. The repetition of the color ‘green’ in the mustard gas poisoning demonstrates that being suffocated “under a green sea” of gas without nobility is the realities the soldiers face, the half rhyme of ‘glory’ and ‘mori’ aims to expose the propaganda that identifies death by poison gas with nobility but rather tries to emphasize that loss in war isn’t patriotic or noble in any way. In the final lines of the poem, the Latin terms “the old lie! Dolce et Decorum Est, pro patria more”, means it is not sweet and honorable to die for one’s own country. Owen critically mocks the nation that loss in war is in any way patriotic or a good experience, by ironically juxtaposing the final lines of the poem with the title “Dolce et Decorum Est” which means it

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