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Saturday, March 16, 2019

Comparing Wilfred Owens Poem, Dulce et Decorum Est and Stings Song, C

Comparing Wilfred Owens Poem, Dulce et decorousness Est and Stings Song, Childrens exhort Is it really bouquet and fitted to die for ones country? This may seem glorious to some, alone to those who have studied World War I and its terrible consequences, this seems a lie. The poet Wilfred Owen was a participant in this war, and wrote the meter Dulce et Decorum Est (It is sweet and fitting to die for ones country) to his poet friends about the voracity, hopelessness, and futility of war, and the desperate plight of the soldiers involved. Almost seventy-five days later, the popular artist Sting worried about the world in which his son was growing up, a world in which older, experienced adults took proceeds of innocent children to increase their own power. Using World War I as a comparison to his own time, he wrote the song Childrens Crusade about these scheming, power-hungry people. Both these poets describe a war in which children were abused, controlled by others selfish wants . Although Sting mainly uses strong allusions to describe the soldiers loss of innocence, Owens poem uses jarring, tangible images of reality that are emotionally more universal.As in other legal poetry, Sting uses strong language to convey the worlds mercilessness toward the innocent. He describes the soldiers in the war using the phrases Virgins with rifles (3), Pawns in a juicy (5), Marching through countries theyve never seen (2). These phrases appeal to parental nature and mother wit of decency. Virgins suggests not only when a ruling of inno-cence, but a feeling of virtue about to be lost. Sting uses the phrase the flower of England, scene down in the mud (11), giving us a beautiful, sporty image to symbolize these young soldiers. He t... ...s a general anti-war feeling, which is only one of the points that form his argument, instead of a feeling for the plight of the children of his day. The newspaper of heroin addiction remains unknown to most. Sting does wield eff ective images, as does Owen, but as Stings allusions remain unknown, Owens tailoring to basic mankind emotions makes us regret the soldiers loss of innocence.Works CitedPrimary SourcesOwen W Dulce et Decorum Est online accessed at http//www.illyria.com/owenpro.html (2002) Sting, Childrens Crusade http//www.elyrics.net/go/s/sting-lyrics/children_s-crusade-lyrics/Secondary SourcesBeasley. C (2002) Wilfred Owen The literary works Network online accessed at http//www.online-literature.com/owen/Roberts E V, Jacobs H.E (2000) Literature An Introduction to Reading and piece (6th Edition) Prentice Hall College Div

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