Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Compare war poems Essay

Many terrible things happened in World War 1 or the colossal War. For me one and only(a) of the main points were the injustice of it all, how the officer class treated the young ordinary soldiers, mostly from the civilizeing class, I have chosen two poems by Siegfried Sassoon which survival of the fittest up on these themes hateful Details and Does It Matter? In both these poems, Sassoon uses chaff to magnify his feelings of both anger and frustration, and this makes both poems particularly poignant. In Base Details, Sassoon portrays the role of an army commander back at headquarters (the Base), come up away from the front line.As soon as you tape Base Details you can tell how much Sassoon hates these base areas, in which the generals lay behind. The sarcasm he uses is so utterly obvious of his hatred and he shows this by using a simple rhyming scheme as if a ? Even in the title, Sassoon begins his sarcasm by punning on the enounce Base i. e. describing both the place, but also the base behaviour in his view of the people there. Sassoon shows his disgust for such people by portraying custody who took themselves so seriously, in their bright red uniformsIf I were fierce Id live with scarlet Majors , but are in realness pathetic, puffing figures bald, and short of breath What Sassoon particularly hated was how these pompous people sent miserable young men to die at the Front expedite glum heroes up the line to death Whilst they were safely tucked away at Base, eating and drinking the best of food and wine Guzzling and swig in the best hotel It was so irritating hearing the puckish words of sympathy poor young chap, I used to know his father wellAnd of course when the war was over, these officers could return safely and uninjure to England, unlike countless millions of ordinary soldiers and other officers And when the war is done and youth stone dead, Id toddle safely home and die in bed. Every line drips with sarcasm which powerfully brings ou t the unfairness of how the war was conducted. This brings me to my second point, and what happened when the many injured soldiers returned to Britain, which is what is Does it Matter? is about.In this poem, Sassoon deals with soldiers with physical and mental injuries of all sorts. losing your legs losing your sight those dreams from the pit Having returned, people at home tried to be nice and understanding, but rattling had no appreciation of how these words would be felt as patronising and how it is to feel you are being pitied in this way. Sassoon again uses a form of sarcasm here, although less bitter than in Base Details. In each of the three stanzas of this poem, Sassoon asks with ironyDoes it matter? that the soldier had such and such an injury when it understandably matters whether you have lost you legs, or sight or are going out of your mind with awful nightmares. In each case he paints a picture of how hurtful and frustrating it was for these soldiers to hear peopl e at home almost dismiss their injuries, when they can then happily go about their give birth lives in a way that the soldiers cannot when the others come in after hunting (with legs ) It really was so patronising, even if unintentional, to sayThere is such splendid work for the blind Or And people wont say that youre mad For theyll know that you fought for your country And no one will worry a bit. It is really like saying there, there to a child. War is always an awful thing, and causes much misery for all concerned. In the above poems about the Great War, Sassoon focused on two aspects, the awful unfairness of how ordinary soldiers were sent to their death by useless and vain superiors, and the anguish of those who returned injured caused by the patronising pity of those at home.

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