Analysis Of Strange Meeting

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Hell: a Place of Paradoxes and Pity In “Strange Meeting,” Wilfred Owen presents readers with an unusual description of a soldier’s experience in hell. As the speaker escapes from battle, he proceeds down a long tunnel where he hears the groans of sleepers and is met by another soldier with a “dead smile.” As a soldier of the First World War, Owen writes out of his personal experience, one of physical, moral and psychological trauma. The melancholic nature of the poem results from the specific form and meter in which Wilfred Owen brilliantly writes, and in turn gives the poem a dreamlike sensation. The title of this poem is not the only thing that is strange, as Owen maintains this theme through irony as well as the paradoxical and ambiguous …show more content…

Owen furthers this confusion through the line “whatever hope is yours/Was my life also” (16/17), which I interpret as a shared identity and/or purpose between the soldiers. The caesuras of the poem and anaphora “courage was mine, and I had mystery/Wisdom was mine, and I had mastery” (30/31) also add ambiguity and give the encounter an anecdotal feel. Symbolically, I imagine Wilfred Owen means war is very ambiguous as well because many glorify it and think it is heroic, whereas others feel it is destructive and …show more content…

Wilfred Owen wrote “Strange Meeting” in the spring or early summer of 1918 and stands in the forefront of Owen’s achievements. During this time, World War One is at the peak of its destruction, and is seen as the most horrendous out of the two Great Wars because of trench warfare. This poem explores a strange meeting and an even stranger fate for the innocent victims of war. Today, we study famous poets of the First World War such as John McCrae, Alan Seeger, and Isaac Rosenberg, because they captivate the horrors of war and help today’s society realize the mass destruction “titanic wars had groined” (3). I believe I fell in love with Owen’s poem because it doesn’t glorify war or make it out to be heroic. It accurately illustrates the cruel and inhumane experiences of soldiers during the wars, and the many ‘strange friends’ that managed to ‘escape’ to death in

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