Preview

HOMECOMING- Bruce Dawe

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
329 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
HOMECOMING- Bruce Dawe
Bruce Dawe's "Homecoming" is a deeply moving poem, which follows the long journey home for the corpses of dead soldiers. The Vietnam war inspired Dawe to write this poem but it can easily be applied to any war. The message is the same - war kills and wastes lives.

The word 'homecoming' implies a time of reunion and joy. Dawe ironically uses 'homecoming' to depict the great sadness of dead soldiers transported back home. In the poem Dawe keeps repeating, "they're bringing them home", to emphasise this was meant to be a joyous moment for relatives and friends; instead, it is a moment of tragedy and grief .

"Homecoming" highlights the only product of war is death. Dawe creates war as a machine and its process line of churning out corpses with his use of many active verbs, "bringing", "picking", "zipping","tagging", "giving" and "rolling". Even more sorrowful is the fact the dead soldiers are referred to as "them"- they are no longer people, they are no longer worth anything to war.

Bruce Dawe effectively uses imagery to create a vividness in the reader's mind. One of the most haunting images is the simile "telegrams tremble like leaves from a wintering tree" and there are so many telegrams being sent to relatives of the fallen soldiers, it is like a wintering tree. In winter, a tree usually loses most its leaves; war kills most soldiers.

Dawe's anger towards the futility of war is clearly seen in the ironic last line of the poem, "they're bringing them home, now, too late, too early." The dead soldiers have finally arrived home but it's too late because they're already dead and too early because they didn't finish their tour of duty and their lives are totally unfullfulled.

In conclusion, "Homecoming" presents war from a different perspective - the fallen soldiers. Soldiers should not be conscripted as pawns to fight a war for disputes between governments, as life is very precious; everyone deserves to live and fullfill their

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Weapons Training Analysis

    • 369 Words
    • 2 Pages

    There are many techniques used in the poem by Dawe to convey that war is not a game. An example of this is how he uses rhyming, “If you had one more brain… open that drain”. This expresses the pointlessness of war mainly through the words “brain” and “drain”. It shows that Dawe wants to express that if you were stupid enough to go to war, you may as well throw your life away. This concept of futility is also expressed through the repetition of “dead, dead, dead” in the last line of the poem, which emphasises the tremendous loss in war that is inevitable. Dawe also shows that war is not a game through the technique of juxtaposition at the very end of the poem in the sentence “that's right grab and check the magazine man its not a woman’s tit”. This shows that the soldiers must take the weapons training serious in order to survive in…

    • 369 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bruce Dawe is a famous poet born in 1930. He incorporated similar techniques in his poems ‘War Without End’ and ‘Description of an Idea’. In the ‘War Without End’ the war is metaphorical and represented as the never ending car crashes and accidents on our roads every year whereas in ‘Description of an Idea’ the war is represented as a historical past event that was associated with the 1989 massacre in Tiananmen Square. Each poem illustrates the similarities between a metaphorical and literal war via the use of repetition, historical references and ambiguity.…

    • 892 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Similarly, Bruce Dawe’s Homecoming emphasises on the ruthless and destructive power of politics during the Vietnam war. Dawe’s monotonous and mournful tone throughout the poem reflects his emotions towards warfare as it lacked historical sense and ultimately futile. Witnessing the Vietnam war first hand as a pilot Dawe’s uses the alliteration “All day, day after day” to create vivid imagery of the endless unidentified soldiers which are coming in. Allowing responders to comprehend the mass destruction and ruthless influence politics has over the individual to sacrifice life. Furthermore, Dawe dedicates three lines to the anaphora or “they’re” and repetition “them”, depicting a machine-like process of collecting bodies revealing the ghastly…

    • 219 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Through Erich Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front the reader learns that war is not all combat and wounded men. It is brainwashing soldiers, forcing them to forget their homes and families. The war suffocates innocent people simply trying to serve their country, and turns them into living corpses.…

    • 666 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Bruce Dawe has used a variety of literary devices to represent specific marginalised groups in ways that challenge their reader’s perceptions. Two of his poems; ‘Homecoming’ and ‘Weapons Training’ are key and transparent examples of literary devices being utilised to represent specific marginalised groups. Both of these poems were set during the 1950’s, with Vietnam being written to represent soldiers pre-war and homecoming to represent soldiers returning to Australia. During this time period, the Australian nation lived via a very patriarchal manner, and had the utmost respect and admiration of their soldiers that fought during the world wars. However, it has been noted in Australian history that there was very little to no compassion given towards the returning soldiers from Vietnam; Homecoming is an attack at society for their reverence and respect-or lack of. This represents the marginalised soldiers from the Vietnam War, for the War Veterans from WW1 and WW2 had always traditionally returned home to a hero’s welcome, greeted at the airway and society’s full support to the brave soldiers who had risked and possibly given their lives for the country. Weapons Training is another war poem, but this time targets young soldiers pre-war on what can be assumed as a final addressing before taking into the ranks, this poem however various from the previous, the soldiers would have gone into the War with the expectation of being given thanks and praise for their bravery, instead they were barked at, abused and insulted. Dawe has represented both of the marginalised soldiers in both of the respective poems through his use of literary devices which can all fall under the brackets of a) Imagery and b) language, integrating into some finer details.…

    • 2124 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The three narratives "Home Soil" by Irene Zabytko, "Song of Napalm" by Bruce Weigl, and "Dulce et Decorum Est" by Wilfred Owen all have the same feelings of war and memory, although not everyone experiences the same war. Zabytko, Weigl, and Owen used shifting beats, dramatic descriptions, and intense, painful images, to convince us that the horror of war far outweighs the devoted awareness of those who fantasize war and the memories that support it.…

    • 769 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bruce Dawe homecoming

    • 392 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Another technique used in "Homecoming" that helps us gain an insight into the personal and public experiences is the use of irony. The title homecoming usually implies a heroic or celebratory return with family and friends. It also invokes a sense of anticipation for the return of a particular individual, however the title is ironic as the "Homecoming", is related to the mourning and death of a nameless soldier. Another affective us of irony would be the repetition of the suffix -ing; "picking", "zipping", "tagging", "giving" and "bringing". These words are the actions of the processors; they usually imply life and strength but are used ironically as the processors handle the cold, limp and lifeless bodies. This also gives us an interesting insight into…

    • 392 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    War is a battle of not only the physical but also the psychological. In the text, All quiet on the western front, by Enrich Maria Remarque, and the poem Homecoming, by Bruce Dawe, our understanding is challenged through various representations of war such as innocence, srvivl and grief.…

    • 1195 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ww1 Dialectical Journal

    • 1199 Words
    • 5 Pages

    After reading the novel there were many things about my feelings towards war. Before reading the novel I always knew that war was a hard thing on a person, emotionally and physically. During the read it really showed me that what soldiers go through is really rough, from being in the war but even when returning home. One of the things that stuck out to me is how homesick soldiers get while fighting. While fighting the thought of killing humans, but yet also get yourself killed if you do one thing wrong or make a wrong step somewhere. "I will come back again" chapter 10 page #258 This Is a quote that sticks out to me in this situation. Because it just shows how hard the wars on them and how much they wanted to come back home, also how they…

    • 1199 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Homecoming by Bruce Dawe illustrates and recounts the tragedies of the Vietnam War in an even-tempered, but negative tone. Dawe establishes the universal theme of senseless life loss in war throughout the poem. The last and finals line of the poem produces an idea of a paradox. “They’re bringing them home now, too late,” because the ultimate chance to save their lives has past and gone. Anyhow, it is also “too early” in the sense as all the soldiers at war are too young, leaving an unfulfilled life behind them. Sadly, these soldiers will never receive the true recognition and acknowledgement for their efforts that would have been given at the end of the war purely because of the fact of the staggering number of soldiers dying in war senselessly. With the aid of the poetic technique of paradox, Bruce Dawe make a final and lasting attempt at clarifying…

    • 514 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Weapons Training

    • 2145 Words
    • 9 Pages

    The poem "Weapons training" composed by Bruce Dawe, explores the realities of war. The poem is situated in the period of the Viet-Nam war…

    • 2145 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    While he may not be for the war, the façade of bravery and courage is soon washed away with realities of unfairness and the surveillance of the government as they are forced complete tasks. The messages lying in the novel, life is not entirely fair and war is diminishing to its soldiers, are evidentially proved throughout the…

    • 677 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Faced with society’s indifference, uneasiness, and outright rejection and gripped by their own troubled memories of the war, thousands of veterans lapsed into the sort of silence…(307). Like any veteran, there is pain associated with the war they served in. For just as they lost friends, fellow soldiers, and brothers, they often times lost parts of themselves on the battlefield. “Veterans, too wanted to bury the war, to put it behind them…Like most Americans they, too, were trying to forget the war” (308). These men who left America as boys came back changed and estranged. Understanding or not, for or against the war, there was a constant separation from the Veterans and the rest of America. While they were trained for combat, they were not prepared to deal with the aftermath that the war would cause, because no one knows how to train for…

    • 1385 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Since reading Slaughterhouse Five, the reoccurring theme has been the idea of war. I believe that this theme has lead to show us how critical and really how destructive war can be. Although in some aspects Billy Pilgrim is able to recover from war, I still feel that it disheartened him a lot. I believe the stress and post trauma really seems to take a toll on him. I get this idea based on events and experiences that he had to face. I have had family member who have been soldiers and have had the traumatic experience of dealing with post war.…

    • 273 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    War and Dehumanisation

    • 526 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The first two stanzas of the poem are used to make us feel sympathy for the soldiers, but the tone changes in the last stanza where it says,…

    • 526 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays