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Ducle Et Decorum Est


            
             In the poem, "Dulce Et Decorum Est", the main point Owen conveys is the sheer horror of war and that there is little or no glory in dying. He uses many techniques to show his feelings towards the war.
             In the first stanza of "Dulce Et Decorum Est", Owen describes the men and the condition they are in, and through his language shows that the soldiers deplore the conditions. Owen the moves on to tell the reader how even in their weaken state the soldiers march on, until the enemy's gas attack. This causes the soldiers to hurriedly put their gas masks on, but one soldier did not put his mask on in time. Owen then reveals the condition the soldier is in, and how even in the time to come he could not forget the images that it left him with. In the last stanza he tells the readers that if one had seen what he had seen then one would never encourage the next generation to fight in a war.
             Owen use imagery constantly to convey the conditions and feelings experienced during WWI. First, he uses metaphor throughout the poem. The first metaphor is "haunting flares". This can be interpreted in three different ways. The first interpretation on this is that the flares fired up by the enemies to light up the battlefield are representing the souls of fallen soldiers. The other interpretation is that they represent the power the enemy has the soldier's mortality as the expose the soldiers in the night. Both of these interpretations are hard to believe when Owen's work is realistic so they are just truly flares and nothing more. The second metaphor is " an ecstasy of fumbling". This is an important metaphor because it describes the quick manner in which the soldiers will have been trying to put on their masks. The soldiers would have been trying to put their masks on in a hurry but due to their physical condition their minds would have been wanting to move faster than their bodies would have allowed them, this is why the were "fumbling".


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