Indice
Rupert Brooke (1887-1915)
Rupert Brooke (1887-1915) came from a wealthy family. He studied at King’s college in Cambridge. He joined the army but didn’t manage to get to the front as he died during training in 1915. He gained success during the war as a ‘war poet’ thanks to his war sonnets among which ‘The soldiers’. He became a symbol of the English propaganda to encourage young men to enlist and fight for the country. He was called ‘The romantic hero’ as he had a sentimentalized view of the war.Wilfred Owen (1893-1918)
Wilfred Owen (1893-1918) came from a working class family. To gain money for his studies he moved to France where he started teaching English. In 1915 he came back and enlisted. A turning point of his life and his career was the Battle of the Somme during which he remained buried for three days with his friends’ corpses. He was diagnosed shell shocked and was sent to a War hospital in Scotland where he met Sigried Sassoon. After the treatment he went back to the front where he died a week before the Armistice (November 11th 1918).Dulce et Decorum Est
It is based on Owen’s experience of the horrors of the war in the trenches and it is an attempt to communicate the pity of War to future generations. It is the recollection of an old and gloomy memory of the past. The poem describes with the description of a group of soldiers exhausted by the war around them. Suddenly they find themselves under a gas attack. One soldier fails to fit his gas mask in time and is overtaken by the gas. Owen describes the soldier’s agonizing death. There are a lot of alliteration and a lot of distress. There is no rhyme. The Latin phrase ‘Dulce et Decorum est pro patria mori’ means that is sweet and fitting to die for the country. Owen criticizes the way society, through propaganda, misled young men into believing that dying in war was a noble act.The last stanza is a dialogue between the narrator and the reader. Death is like a punishment and there is finally the realization that war is actually an inhuman and not heroic act at all.
In the poem he recreates the miserable conditions and constant stress in which the soldiers lived. He also gives strong visual descriptions of the effects of the poisoned gas and the reality of death, describing the faces of his mates.