Analysis Of Dulce Et Decorum Est By Wilfred Owen

366 Words2 Pages

Physical suffering is a crucial theme illustrated throughout Owen’s poetry. This is evident in the poem “Dulce Et Decorum Est”. Owen recounts the dreadful experience of a gas attack endured by many soldiers during the Great War. The visual imagery presented in the line “Bent double, like old beggars under sacks” describes the physical suffering of the soldiers. Owen is stressing the conditions of the soldiers being exhausted, barely walking and overall deformed, unlike what the propaganda posters showed. It is used to create a picture in the audience’s mind to show the suffering of the soldiers and the effects of war. He is teaching the audience the truth about war and is proving the propaganda posters wrong. A simile has also been used which compares the physically drained soldiers to beggars. …show more content…

The men before the war, before suffering physically and the people they are now during the war. Owen also uses auditory imagery used in the line “He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning” to define the horrific sights before him and the audience. He also does this to create a more vibrant image of the physical suffering attained from war and the gas attack. Owen uses visual imagery in the line “at every jolt, the blood come gargling from the froth corrupted