The poem Beat! Beat! Drums! by Walter Whitman best represents the Civil War. This is because of how the author expresses the loud booming of the instruments. The music is meant to drown out any sound from the people‚ and distract them from their daily activities. People are not responding to this war cry‚ making the bugles and drums get louder and louder to drown out everyone from the mothers to the carpenters. Whitman’s tone is excitement‚ proved by the use of his exclamation points at the beginning
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This Means War War is a time when men are drafted to fight for their country. Henry Reed believes that the soldiers are wasting their lives fighting in the war‚ instead of being home with their loved ones. Henry Reed’s poem‚ “Naming of Parts‚” demonstrates his negative opinion of war‚ how there are two different speakers‚ and that there are different main ideas of the parts. First‚ Reed writes this poem in order to assert his beliefs about war. He believes that war represents the death of young
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Tim O’Brien‚ author of The Things They Carried‚ applies multiple techniques in his memoir in order to produce the theme of horror in war. He utilizes word connotation‚ literary/rhetorical techniques‚ sentence structure‚ and overall structure in the memoir. In an excerpt on page 199‚ O’Brien employs the combination of anaphora‚ metaphor‚ and negative word connotation to illustrate the horror of the Vietnam War. O’Brien often uses anaphora to emphasize his points within the sentences. Additionally
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The Transcendent Maverick Mark Twain‚ American humorist and novelist‚ captured a world audience with stories of boyhood adventure and with commentary on man’s shortcomings that is satirical while it probes‚ often bitterly‚ the roots of human behavior. Additionally‚ the many facets of Twain include: his incomparable humor‚ his revolutionary use of vernacular language‚ his exploration of the realities of American life‚ his irreverence and skepticism‚ his profound grappling with issues of race and his
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Wilfred Owen was a poet from the brutal first world war. He mostly wrote his poems to create an image of the unpleasant situation of war; to show people back home. The message in “Dulce et Decorum Est” - Owen mostly tried to present was the how untruthful the propaganda is and how it is all a “Lie”. The depth of antipathy towards war propaganda is stands out in this poem. Another image he has created in this poem is the loathsome life of a soldier in the trenches. Owen also wanted to show the pity
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How could war be kind? War cannot be kind. Throughout Stephen Crane’s stories‚ we learn he is opposed to the civil war. Stephen Crane uses sarcasm in “War is Kind” and then gives gruesome details of a soldier’s experience in “A Mystery of Heroism” to prove he is opposed to the war. Sarcasm is meant to provoke thought and to poke fun at the other topic. “War is Kind” uses sarcasm to explain the horrors of war‚ and the effect it has on those related to those in the war. “Great is the battle-god‚ great
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Wilfred Owen’s "Dulce Et Decorum Est" conveys in a bitter‚ sardonic tone the true macabre and dolorous reality of a popularly romanticized view of war. The simplicity of diction and rhythm provide a sense of verisimilitude‚ while paralleled by mimicry of the highly romanticized poetic form of the sonnet communicates a harsh‚ dramatic anti-war sentiment while mocking the opposition to his outlook. The natural rhythm of iambic pentameter and frequent caesura creates a lull that imitates the surrealism
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The caliginous effect of war has entailed the dehumanise of soldiers where death apprehends reality as killing the opposing mortal is a sign of success and failing for one’s country is futile as the soldier deceased and no longer needed. Wilford Owen delivers a starling message about the reality and costs of war. He highlights the dehumanisation and futile deaths of the soldier’s life’s in the year 1917 throughout the gloomy war in his poems Anthemed for doomed youth and the next war. In Wilford
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"Dulce et Decorum Est" Explication Wilfred Owen’s "Dulce et Decorum Est" is a description of a gas attack suffered by a group of soldiers in World War One. By using shifting rhythms‚ dramatic description‚ and imagery‚ the speaker tries to convince readers that the horror of war outweighs the patriotic duty to war. In the first stanza the speaker describes the calm before the gas attack. The speaker uses alliteration‚ "bent beggars‚" and onomatopoeia "cough" to create a sense of despair
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Vocabulary: lime (12) - “And flound’ring like a man in fire or lime.” The quote speaks about a man in a fire so the word lime can be referring to something that is a sort of substance that is burning through the body. The Latin quotation (27-28)‚ from the Roman poet Horace‚ means “It is sweet and becoming to die for one’s country.” What is the poem’s comment on this statement? The poem’s comment on this statement is the restating of the title of the poem. The title translates from latin to english
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