Saturday, October 12, 2019
War Poetry :: English Literature
War Poetry    Alfred Tennyson and Wilfred Owen present different ideas about war in  their poems, ââ¬Å"The Charge of the Light Brigadeâ⬠ and ââ¬Å"Dulce et Decorum  estâ⬠. Write about these poems and their effect on you.    ââ¬Å"The Charge of the Light Brigadeâ⬠ was written by Alfred, Lord  Tennyson, about The Battle of Balaclava which took place in 1854.  Tennyson wrote the poem using information from an article in The Times  and it remembers the bravery of the outnumbered cavalry men who were  wrongly sent into battle.    ââ¬Å"Dulce et Decorum estâ⬠ was written by Wilfred Owen during the First  World War. It was written to show the truth about war and to  illustrate that it is not a good thing to die for your country.    ââ¬Å"The Charge of the Light Brigadeâ⬠ has six verses. The third, fourth  and fifth stanzas concentrate on the battle itself. The main part of  the battle is depicted in verse four and tells how the soldiers were  ââ¬Å"sabring the gunnersâ⬠ and how ââ¬Å"Cossack and Russian reeledâ⬠ portraying  the victory of the Light Brigade. The final stanza is a message from  the poet to ââ¬Å"honour the Light Brigadeâ⬠ and not to forget what the six  hundred men did.    The poem has a constant rhyming pattern all the way through with words  like ââ¬Å"blunderedâ⬠, ââ¬Å"hundredâ⬠, ââ¬Å"thunderedâ⬠ and ââ¬Å"wonderedâ⬠ or ââ¬Å"shellâ⬠,  ââ¬Å"fellâ⬠ and ââ¬Å"wellâ⬠. Having this rhyming pattern throughout makes the  poem seem to flow more easily and gives it a more prominent structure.  It emulates the pace of the battle which was over in twenty minutes.    The rhythm of ââ¬Å"The Charge of the Light Brigadeâ⬠ mimics the sound of  horsesââ¬â¢ hooves by using tripling such as ââ¬Å"half a league, half a  league, half a league onwardâ⬠ the sound of galloping horses is  continued when the poet uses words like ââ¬Å"volleyed and thunderedâ⬠.    Tennyson draws attention to the fact that The Battle of Balaclava was  one of the biggest military blunders ever made in his poem by writing  ââ¬Å"Into the jaws of death, into the mouth of hellâ⬠ showing that to send  the Light Brigade into battle was wrong and that hardly any of them  would return.    In verse two the poet informs the reader that the soldiers knew that a  mistake had been made but followed the orders anyway. The lines  ââ¬Å"Theirs not to make reply, theirs not to reason why, theirs but to do  and dieâ⬠ show that the soldiers could not refuse to go into battle,  even if they knew ââ¬Å"someone had blunderedâ⬠, all they had to do was go  into battle and die.    Tennyson shows admiration for the Light Brigade in his poem.  					    
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