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Wilfred Owen uses many techniques in his poem Dulce et Decorum est to

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Wilfred Owen uses many techniques in his poem Dulce et Decorum est to convey the horror and conditions

The poem "Dulce et Decorum est" is about the horrible things the soldiers had to see and the awful conditions that the soldiers had to fight through.

Wilfred Owen uses many techniques in his poem "Dulce et Decorum est" to convey the horror and conditions of the war. These techniques will be explained and the purpose of each section will be will also be described. In the first section he uses similes, and specific word choice. This section is meant to show us the state of the soldiers. In the first sentence he uses the simile “bent double, like old beggars under sacks” which shows that the men have to a carry a large …show more content…

The first is that they are so deafened from previous explosions that they can't even hear the dropping of a gas shell as the five-nines were a type off shell. The second is that the five-nines are meant to give us an image of men falling behind and no-one noticing they have fallen. In the second section the purpose of which is to describe one of the many gas attacks soldiers had to endure and the many deaths the soldiers had to see, he starts the verse with "gas! gas! quick, boys!" to show how quickly they had to react to the attack and to draw our attention to the verse as we start to read it. Then he writes "an ecstasy of fumbling" which is an odd statement as it is usually used to describe a moment of happiness but in this case is use to show the urgency of the soldiers trying to put their gas masks on. The suddenness of the gas attack hits you as it is completely un-talked about before and suddenly you have the word GAS in capitals in front of you, this helps you to understand how sudden the attacks were.

In the third section, which is about the death of a man and the effect of it on him, he writes about one man who obviously didn’t get his mask on time as it says he was “yelling out and stumbling”. As he writes "he plunges at me" you realise how helpless Owen must have felt as their was nothing he could do to help. Another idea of the helplessness of the man is he

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