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Anthem Doomed (changes)
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Owen
- Met Siegfriend Sassoon when healing between tours of duty, which cemented his dedication to poetry, specifically war poetry
- Yeats called his stuff “all blood, dirt, & sucked sugar stick”
- But he thought he poetry was about taking away sentiment and glory of war
- Not patriotic, not sentimental
- Honest, accurate, truthful
- Not about heroes, glory, honor, majesty
- “My subject is War, and the pity of War. The Poetry is in the pity.”
Anthem for Doomed Youth
- Content
- “What passing bells for those who die as cattle?”
- Sacred institutions don’t cut the mustard in the context of war
- Style
- Word choices are religious (prayers, choirs, holy): sense of the spiritual has been taken away from them
- The rhyme scheme, which is regular and soothing, seems to make up for the tone of war:
- “The shrill, demented choirs of wailing shells”
- Though he claims consolation will come with the next generation, that it’s not possible yet, the fact that his poetry exists belies
him him.
Revised on January 24, 2010 23:38:27
by
Anonymous Coward?
(222.127.197.140)