Disabled Wilfred Owen Essay

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To what extent can the poem ‘Disabled’ be seen as a form of social criticism?
How does the writer convey his ideas to the reader? ‘Disabled’ by Wilfred Owen is a comparison between the past days of glory and the current life of an injured soldier, who has just returned home from the battlefields of World War I. The poem reflects his pain and struggles, both physically and mentally, that he has to bear. The title itself reminds us that the subject is never again seen as a human, but just a disability. Also, the author purposely does not name the protagonist, just referring to the subject as “he” for others to relate. There is the universal quality as soldiers world-wide suffered the same pain and torture as the subject of this poem. The purpose of the poem was to warn the …show more content…

Irony is applied in the first two lines of the stanza as he was dismayed of the loss of his legs, yet “one time he liked a blood-smear down his leg.” We are told that he was proud to end a football match with an injury, possibly because it made him seem tough and manly. Also, his pride had lost him everything he had been proud of. Due to his disability, he could no longer win a goal or be praised as a hero. He blames his mistake on alcohol and a compliment from one who told him “he’d look a god in kilts.” This compliment also informs the reader that the soldier is part of the Scottish regiments. Another cause to his decision is shown through repetition as he was “to please his Meg” and “to please the giddy jilts”, suggesting he wanted to make women proud. However, it is ironic that the soldier had joined for the women, since it is stated in previous and later stanzas that women ignore him due to his disability from the war. Owen is suggesting that girls are only curious of the idea of a soldier, but not the reality of a soldier. Moreover, we can see his youthful ignorance and how naïve he used to

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