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Saturday, January 11, 2020
Feelings of war in his poems ââ¬ËExposureââ¬â¢ and ââ¬ËSpring Offensiveââ¬â¢ Essay
How does Owen use the seasons and nature to illustrate his feelings about war? Compare his treatment of the natural world in ââ¬ËExposureââ¬â¢ and ââ¬ËSpring Offensiveââ¬â¢. Owen signed up to fight in the war in 1915. He thought that war was romantic and heroic but when he was in the front line he realised that it was the exact opposite of what he thought it would be. He uses nature and the natural world to represent this evil place but also in his poetry the natural world is the soldierââ¬â¢s one source of comfort. So in this essay I am going to discuss how Owen portrays the natural world in his poems ââ¬ËSpring Offensiveââ¬â¢ and ââ¬ËExposureââ¬â¢. To begin with the tone in ââ¬ËSpring Offensiveââ¬â¢ changes as the poem progresses. This mimics the mood of the soldiers. Even though the tone changes throughout the poem it is noticeable that the theme of the soldiers not wanting to go into war. Even in the ââ¬Ëquietââ¬â¢ moments in the poem the threat of suffering is present. However, the tone in ââ¬ËExposureââ¬â¢ is different to the tone in ââ¬ËSpring Offensiveââ¬â¢ because the tone in ââ¬ËExposureââ¬â¢ is mainly one of frustration, despair and desolation. This is felt by the soldiers as they wait to go into battle but it appears that that time will never come. Nature adds to the tone in ââ¬ËExposureââ¬â¢ because as they are waiting to go into battle it is the weather that is doing them damage. Also the rhythm and rhyme in ââ¬ËSpring Offensiveââ¬â¢ is a very important part of the poem. It is important because it gives the reader a bigger insight into the poem. When he pairs ââ¬Å"last hillâ⬠and ââ¬Å"stood stillâ⬠together the repeated ââ¬Ëllââ¬â¢ sounds gives the reader the feeling that the journey the soldiers are taking is a long one. When he uses ââ¬Å"grassâ⬠and ââ¬Å"glassâ⬠it gives the reader a better idea of the distress the soldiers are feeling through the harsh ââ¬Ëssââ¬â¢ sounds. He also uses ââ¬Å"togetherâ⬠and ââ¬Å"heatherâ⬠to create pace to show the soldiersââ¬â¢ movement. But, the rhythm and rhyme in ââ¬ËExposureââ¬â¢ isnââ¬â¢t as important as the rhythm and rhyme in ââ¬ËSpring Offensiveââ¬â¢ because it doesnââ¬â¢t explain much more to the poem. All it does is use half rhyme because perfect rhyme has no place in this poem as it would create a sense of fluid movement which the sol diers never feel. Further more, the imagery in ââ¬ËSpring Offensiveââ¬â¢ changes in every stanza to create a different feeling each time. The poem starts of by making the soldiers sound like they are beasts; ââ¬Å"they fed, and eased of pack-loads, were at easeâ⬠. Also it tells us that the soldiers are accepting that they are going to die. I know this from the line ââ¬Å"knowing their feet had come to the end of the worldâ⬠. It also goes on to make nature sound like its comforting the soldiers as ââ¬Å"marvelling they stood, and watched the long grass swirledâ⬠. It also makes summer sound like it is helping the soldiers forget about the pain they are suffering; ââ¬Å"and though the summer oozed into their veins, like an injected drug for their bodies painsâ⬠. Then the feeling of war being heroic returns with nature offering golden gifts to the soldiers; ââ¬Å"blessed with gold their slow bootsâ⬠but it is still letting us know that the soldiers are reluctant to go into war; ââ¬Å"slow bootsâ⬠. The use of the simile ââ¬Å"like sorrowing armsâ⬠unites nature with the natural suffering of the families left behind. Near the end of the poem there is the image of pounding sea. This gives the image of the soldiers crashing into a ââ¬Å"surf of bulletsâ⬠, tossed upon the ââ¬Å"upsurgeâ⬠of hell. Natureââ¬â¢s power and force is linked with the hellish power of war. The final stanza shows nature returning to a peaceful state, but the memories of battle are still present. However, the imagery in ââ¬ËExposureââ¬â¢ remains the same the whole way through the poem. It is just mainly showing nature as the soldiersââ¬â¢ main enemy. The wind is personified and is said to ââ¬Å"knifeâ⬠the men. Silence is also personified as an invisible but real threat. Image of menââ¬â¢s suffering linked again with nature, ââ¬Å"mad gustsâ⬠¦like twitching agonies of men among its bramblesâ⬠which is letting us know nature can cause pain. This is the opposite of ââ¬ËSpring Offensiveââ¬â¢ where nature has healing qualities. In this poem the power of god seems to be dying. War is more powerfully destructive than godââ¬â¢s ability to create. Death is the main image in ââ¬ËExposureââ¬â¢ but it is death through nature rather than through weapons; ââ¬Å"frost will fastenâ⬠¦shrivelling many handsâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ the signs of death are shared by the corpses and by the living. The men are described as ââ¬Å"ghostsâ⬠because the suffering of war has caused the men to die inside; this means they arenââ¬â¢t vulnerable to emotions anymore. The dreams the soldiers have are concentrated on nature in its restored form, ââ¬Å"grassier ditchesâ⬠¦littered with blossomsâ⬠this idealised view of nature only exists in a wishful form. Also the language in ââ¬ËSpring Offensiveââ¬â¢ tries to affect the readerââ¬â¢s emotions. The poem starts of with harsh constant ââ¬ËKââ¬â¢ sounds which are aurally discomforting; ââ¬Å"to face the stark, blank sky beyond the ridgeâ⬠. This mimics the soldiersââ¬â¢ distressing existence. It also goes on to use of the connective ââ¬Å"soâ⬠, this suggests harmlessness and ordinariness but it introduces the deathly action of their charge. The language in ââ¬ËExposureââ¬â¢ is used in the same way as the language in ââ¬ËSpring Offensiveââ¬â¢. There are harsh consonant sounds and sibilance emphasises the bitter and bleak conditions of the men. So to conclude Owen uses nature and seasons to show that he thinks that war is an awful place and that you feel the negative effects of war even if you arenââ¬â¢t involved in a battle at that time.
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