Comparison Of War By Wilfred Owen

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Two Sides of One Coin The biggest and I think only main difference between Wilfred Owen’s poems “1914” and “Dulce Et Decorum Est”, (written in 1917) is that in “1914” Wilfred point of view is from a citizen’s stand point and in “Dulce Et Decorum Est”, Wilfred’s point of view as a solider in the British army in the Great War. In “1914” Wilfred Owen wrote about how the Great War broke out and how once it did from the beginning it caused great destruction and darkness to hit the countries that were involved. Owen went on to say “THE foul tornado, centred in Berlin, Is over all the width of Europe whirled,” I believe he was comparing the war to the tornado, as he watched, he saw how the war started out of nowhere and grew destroying everything …show more content…

The hope he had begun to decompose because of how long the war was lasting; longer than expected when he says “The grain of human Autumn rots, down-hurled”. Owen goes on to show how the war expanded effecting different countries at different times, Greece in the Spring and Rome in the Summer. …show more content…

He starts the poem describing his fellow soldiers and himself as beggers, knock-kneed, coughing like ugly old women, cursed through a wet and horrible earth; feeling hatred towards the earth. As they began to march towards their distant rest point. Owen states “Many had lost their boots, but limped on, blood-shod;” saying how some were missing parts of their uniforms, mainly their boots and as they marched on the blood on their cuts had clotted creating a protecting shield in substitute for their boots. As they moved on they were tired, so tired Owen describes the feeling as “…blind; drunk with fatigue”. Moved past the Five-Nine attacks they were then attacked by gas bombs. When Owen states “Gas! GAS! Quick boys! – An ecstasy of fumbling, fitting the clumsy helmets just in time;” he shows us how even when they soldiers only had enough energy to keep walking they had to dig deep and find the strength to place their gas masks on to get through the gas attack. While going through that Owen tells us how not everyone had enough strength to get their mask on and all he heard was yelling out and as he watched one soldier through his dim, misty, thick green light as he was drowning on dry land from poison; “as under a green sea, I saw him drowning”. Owen goes on to outline how this soldier plunges at him for help

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