Saturday, October 12, 2019
Comparing and Contrasting the Portrayal and Warfare in Poetry :: War Poems Jesse Pope Wilfred Owen Essays
Comparing and Contrasting the Portrayal and Warfare in Poetry    War poetry    A Comparattive Essay    Choose two poets that we have studied so far. Compare and contrast the  portrayal of warfare in four of the poems studied.    This essay will compare and contrast the portrayal and warfare in four  of the poems studied.    The first world war was portrayed as a glorious and credible cause,  fighting war for your country was deemed as the duty of any credible  man. Being able to represent your country on the battlefield was the  greatest honour a man could have. Men were engulfed with the idea of  being able to fight for their countries futures. Women would have to  do everything they could to stop their husbands and sons from risking  their lives by signing up for the war. At this time poetry was written  to encourage men to go and fight, poets like jessie pope who wrote war  poetry enforced this view.    JESSIE POPE WILFRED OWEN    WHOââ¬â¢S FOR THE DULCE ET DECORUM EST.    GAME?     THE CALL DISABLED    These poems were written about (and at the same time as), World War I,  between 1914 to 1918. In these barbaric four years->killing spree 7   million men and leaving 17 million men injured, (physically-the war  tactics resorted to the tortures of gas attacks, gun-shot wound, shell  shock, starvation and exposure, to name a few...), the rest were  scarred by memories never fading. World war one devastated lives and  souls, time and space. But citizens back home had no way of knowing  what war was capable of, without television or radio to communicate to  them, they were only left to imagine the true horrors men were  enduring. If people had reailsed the true extent and the horrors of  what was actually happening, morale would have been severely  detrimentally affected. These poems were created by the thoughts and  feelings expressed by soldiers at battle.    Propaganda was partially to blame for the young lives that were stolen  by the war, because it encouraged men to actively volunteer for the  dream of taking the empire to victory and in return recieve the pride  of serving their country. Propaganda was engineered to give citizens a  false impression/ illusion of positivity about the events that were  truely making history horrifically, and consistently sent a message of  fortitude and unity to the enemy. Men were driven by promised finicial  gain, status and the chance to travel, but under such pointless pain,  suffering and horror that awaited them, ready to engulf them all in  battle, in such conditions as; 48 hours bomboardment, being surrounded  by dead bodies, acheing (mentally, physically and emotionally), foul  infestation, and living in fear and horror was not worth the cost of a    					    
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