Poetry to 1945 Queen Victoria died in 1901, but most of the certainties of the Victorian age had disappeared long before. ... This was apparent in the poetry of the 1890s – the decade of Aestheticism and Decadence. It was largely a poetry of urban themes; the Romantic dependence on nature had already declined. ... Above all, poetry was not statement or felt sensation, but 'art'. ... Yeats himself quickly drew the lesson that 'We must purify poetry', which was to continue, through movements like Imagism and Vorticism, up to the outbreak of the Great War in 1914, the ...
This is unusual to me because ordinarily I don't like poetry or so I thought. ... I found it interesting that someone would write poetry about such a thing as war. ... This poem may have given me a new outlook on poetry itself. I won't be so closed minded about poetry in the future....
One of the more popular war poets is Wilfred Owen (1893-1918), who began his career as a poet sometime before the War, and whose earlier style of writing, observed in poems like 'Sonnet Written At Teigmouth, On A Pilgrimage To Keats's House' (1911) was derived from that the Romantic ideology, which stated that poetry 'should be personal (to the point of appearing confessional), sincere (which meant limitations on satire and humor) and richly loaded with imagery' (Purkis 82.) However, after enlisting in the army and experiencing firsthand the atrocities of warfare, O...
World war one began in 1914 and ended in 1918. During these four years there were enormous numbers of dead and wounded. Soldiers as young as 18 years old defending trench lines, which produced deadlock and nightmarish battles which ended in horrific consequences. As everyone was a volunteer in...
World war one began in 1914 and ended in 1918. During these four years there were enormous numbers of dead and wounded. Soldiers as young as 18 years old defending trench lines, which produced deadlock and nightmarish battles which ended in horrific consequences. As everyone was a volunteer in 1...
Well very much the same as now, and not the ones to blame somehow for opening up that deadly box of war- (Poetry Library, 1-2) Abercrombie chose to write this poem using third person. ... Available HTTP: www.poetrylibary.org.uk/poetry/quote/txtreply.jsp.quote-id-3973 "Wikipedia- The free Encyclopedia: Jan, 24, 1985 ed. ...
E.E. Cummings and His Works Two women walk past him, conversing with their noses pointed to the sky, in glistening attire, with fur scarves slung around their necks and ornate designs engraved into their dresses. His eyes shift from the gossiping women to a cluster of businessmen laughing whi...
The Prospectives of World War I In World War One many people had very different opinions on the War. Most of the men of that time basically had no say rather or not they went to war because it would take away their families pride. Most of this centered around Nationalism, and pride. Though many p...
Wilfred Edward Salter Owen was born on 18 March 1893 in Oswestry, Shropshire and began to write poetry from a very young age. He went to London University, where he was known to be a quiet and thoughtful student. After going to Bordeaux in 1913 to teach English, Owen returned to England and joined t...
In "The Some: Heroism and Horror in the First World War," Martin Gilbert presents a rather unique study of one of the bloodiest battles ever fought. The Somme is a different battle to write about in that there was so much lost, while neither side was able to gain from it. Even though the battle of t...
Poetry Analysis - Dulce et Decorum Est Wilfred Owen introduces the poem, Dulce et Decorum Est, with a shocking images of soldiers in World War 1. The first two lines sets the mood of the poem - the horror and starkness of life in the war. He refers to the soldiers as 'hags', 'old beggars', wh...
History Coursework - World War One 1) Sources A, B and C are war recruitment posters published by various governments with the aim of influencing more people to volunteer for armed service in the war. Sources A and B are an earlier type of source, depending on the patriotic fervour that swept Britain at the war's outset, portraying enlistment as a duty to the country and empire. The posters themselves being of an accusatory nature, demanding from the reader "What did you do in the war?" and that they should "Go!", the fighting taking a crusade-like facade in which the only way...
His first collection of poetry, "Seven and Somme" (1917) reflects his experience during the war and his love for the countryside-Gloucester, which remains somewhat consistent in his later poems. ... Moreover, in his later poems like "The Silent One," Gurney evinces sentiment and concern for the untold truths of the war, which when we look at his biography and broken poetry, suggests how the war tormented him; leaving his mind and memory fragmented up until his death (Greenblatt 2028). ...
"The brown earth, the torn, blasted earth with the convulsed and dead soldiers, who lie here-it can't be helped-who cry and clutch at our legs as we spring away over them." (Remarque 115) This vivid quote is just one of the numerous examples in the eloquently described passages of how Erich Remarqu...
Do not be mislead by the deceptive title - the front was anything but quiet. And though All Quiet on the Western Front may appear, at first glance, as a novel committed to revealing the senseless horrors of modern warfare with an extraordinary fierceness - indeed, it partly was - beneath the grap...
The poem 'Dulce et Decorum est' by Wilfred Owen entails the experiences of soldiers in World War I. Owen's use of surreal graphics portrays an image of trench warfare that is gruesome and grotesque, offering a powerful message to the reader. Owen's poetry is used as a vehicle for the expressio...
Wilfred Owen fought in the First World War. He enlisted as most young men were doing, so that they could protect Britain. However, in the trenches he realized how horrific the war was and started to make notes about the conditions at first. Then later in a military hospital he edited and collected t...
The Lost Generation Let us see if we cannot make a fine game of it that we shall be all the better for having played out to the end. From which we shall all come home cleaner minded, clearer seeing, made kinder to one another by suffering. Come, gentlemen, you believed that God has called ...
Robert G. L. Waite The Psychopathic God: Adolph Hitler In Robert G. L. Waite's book, entitled, The Psychopathic God: Adolf Hitler, he delves deep into the mind of one of the world's most notorious and destructive rulers of all time. He examines his words, speeches, and behaviors and attempts...