He used four senses to achieve this: visual, aural, tactile and gustatory. The verse that reads, Til on the haunting flares we turned out backs" really brings out the aural imagery it gives. Words such as "Sludge" from the second verse, first stanza, make it almost possible to feel the sludgy' touch and phrases such as "yelling out" and "coughing like hags" give the audience aural images of someone desperately shouting to save others lives from gas, and people coughing severely. The imagery of gustatory can be found from "coughing like hags" in the first stanza and "GAS! Gas!" in the second stanza. Though gas can not be smelled, the fumes from the flames can be predicted to be smelled. We know this because it the soldiers are coughing because of the burning of the shells and fumes coming out from it. Personification was used at the part when it's said "disappointed shells" in the first stanza, last verse. It is more of an effective way of describing how the soldiers were close of being blown up by the thrown shells. Simile plays a good part in the first and the second verse of the opening stanza where it is used as "like old beggars" and "couching like hangs". It is another effective way of using metonymy. By comparing the young soldiers to old hags and poor beggars, the horrible situation at the trenches was well described and exaggerated. Metaphor is something that should …show more content…
It is clearly shown in the last stanza like fourth verse that says "like a devil's sick of sin" meaning the devil is never sick of sin, that the devil indeed enjoys the killing of the people, and it will continued to happen the war will last long. As the first two verses read, Wilfred Owen mentions that it was impossible to dream of a peaceful place during that time. He describes the situation at the trenches very effectively. The diction gives a little twist in the meaning. It sure is horrible by the trenches by the context of the poem, however, the use of diction makes the feeling from this poem more like a dream, so it does not sound too terrible. The first verse of the first stanza is a good example; "GAS! Gas! Quick, boys!An ecstasy of fumbling". Even though the gas must have been one of the most dreadful things by that time, he used juxtaposition to make the gas sound like a drug that's addictive, that makes one feel good. The mood of the poem is sad and depressing. Wilfred Owen talks about his dreams of his terrible time back at the trenches, "guttering, choking, drowning". This adds more to the first verse of the second