Thursday, February 14, 2019
Comparing The Charge of The Light Brigade, War and A Wife in London. Es
Comparing The guide of The Light group, war and A Wife in London. Select tercet poems from the selection, which are concerned withdifferent aspects of war. Write well-nigh and compare the poems in respectof the following The views of war that the poets are expressing The tones and atmospheres of the poems The ways in which oral communication and rhythm are used to reinforce the poets themes and viewpoints Any other factors considered important.The common chord poems that I have chosen are The photograph of The Lightbrigade, War and A Wife in London. I chose sever entirelyy of them fordifferent reasons, but mainly because they each look at very differentaspects of the war and the poets all have completely differentattitudes to war.The Charge of The Light Brigade is an exultant poem, concerned withthe glorified aspect of war, that all men are heroes, brave andcourageous for fighting for their country. It is about a suicidal,yet heroic battle fought by the British Cavalry in 1854. A mistakencommand received by a top-hole sent, unquestioning, 600 horsemencharging into the head of a valley bristling with artillery and nearlyall of them slash.War is set behind the scene and concerns itself with the peoplewho dealt with the consequences of war - the doctors and orderlies. Itis a moving poem and shows the reader how destructive conditions were in SouthAfrica. It is about the dedication of people to try and save theCase (patients) and prevent them from turning into another It yet another dead body. The poet, Edgar Wallace was a medical straighthimself, so he would have had first hand knowledge of how badconditions and casualties could get.A Wife in London deals with the suffering... ...ng inthe tent and during the War the part that is not for show, avery unhealthy wad and Orderly, clean this knife. These eachhave a way of start a window into this little part of the war andgives us an rationality of how horrible it is, with the never-endingstream of casualties and reports back home in newspapers that are notallowed to show anything against war (the part that is not forshow). each(prenominal) of the three poems, haunts the reader after a reading or two,whether for ingenuous or for bad. They have made sure that I, as a reader,am totally against war, no matter how good the reasons are or how oftenglory it is given as in The Charge of The Light Brigade. I amagainst the waiting and mourning for those left behind as in A Wifein London. Moreover, I am most definitely against the loss offathers, sons, brothers and husbands.
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