Thursday, January 23, 2020
Post 1900 War Poetry :: Wilfred Owen Alfred Tennyson War Poems Essays
Post 1900 War Poetry    By looking at several war poems written before and after 1900, I can  see that many elements of the types of poetry change greatly in  several ways. I will be looking at a selection of war poems written by  three different poets, in chronological order, so as to see if the  attitudes to war and writing styles change over time or during various  stages of the war.    Firstly I will be looking at a poem written by Alfred Tennyson about  the charge against the Russian gunners in 1854. The poem is called  "The Charge of the Light Brigade" as it is exactly what happened. The  information that Tennyson used to write the poem came from a newspaper  article from the Times. Tennyson has used the information very well to  give an accurate and informative, yet poetic description of the  charge.    Although Tennyson is writing from secondary information, he has still  incorporated poetic and rhythmic effects to make the poem follow a  rhythm similar to that of a galloping horse. 'Half a league, Half a  league, Half a league onward', the distance of the charge is stated at  the beginning of the poem as it starts straight into the charge.  Although in the article written in the newspaper it states 'At a  distance of 1,200 yards', Tennyson has edited it within similar  distance whilst making the information poetic to read. By starting the  charge at the beginning of the poem, Tennyson has instantly caught the  reader's attention whilst still providing the relevant information for  the poem to tell the story of what happened.    Tennyson glorifies the soldiers greatly by using strong dramatic  language and graphic images that can be vividly formed in the reader's  minds. "All in the valley of Death, rode the six hundred." The  dramatic language here makes it seem like just the unusually small  amount of horsemen used in such a charge would be charging at hell  itself. Tennyson continues to glorify the bravery of the soldiers  throughout the whole poem, 'Boldly they rode and well, Into the jaws  of death', yet the emphasis that he uses on death makes the charge  seem futile and that the men are charging towards their own deaths.    Verses 3 and 5 seem very similar when reading the poem, however in  contrast the charge is towards the gunners in Verse 3 whereas it is  the retreat in Verse 5. Yet Tennyson always keeps the repetition of  600 throughout the poem, even when they are retreating and many of  them have already been killed he continues to refer to them as one  group of six hundred that make up the Light Brigade.  					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.