Thursday, October 24, 2019
Comparison of Anthem for Doomed Youth and An Irish Airman Foresees His
Comparison of Anthem for Doomed Youth and An Irish Airman Foresees His Death    William Butler Yeats has written many pieces of literature, mainly  about Ireland as that is his passion and cause of writing. However  his poem ââ¬Å"An Irish Airman Foresees His Deathâ⬠ is not solely about  Ireland and even though it includes that theme it is rather a  criticism of apathetic people who have no reason for going to war.    The form of Yeatsââ¬â¢ poem is very structured and regular. The rhyme  scheme is ABAB the whole way through the poem and has an unstressed,  stressed beat every time. The poem is made up of one sixteen-lined  stanza and has a straight forward structure. Yeats has used this  format for emphasis to get his point across. He has made the poem  using paired lines which balance with one another neutralising any  feeling that there may have been. Yeats has also made the layout of  the poem very simple and uncomplicated to make Robert Gregoryââ¬â¢s reason  for going to war stand out which is also simple and uncomplicated-He  just wants to fly a plane.    Wilfred Owenââ¬â¢s poem was influenced by another war poet Siegfried  Sassoon. Their conversations about the horrors of war together  provided the framework to many of the poems that Owen wrote. As a  soldier at war, Owen was affected by the traumatising horrors of the  trenches that he saw while he was out there. He was so badly affected  that he was diagnosed with shell shock and sent to hospital in  Edinburgh. These horrific scenes caused Owen to write such gruesome  yet realistic compositions. Like Yeatsââ¬â¢ poem, ââ¬Å"Anthem for doomed  youthâ⬠ is also a criticism only this time it is a criticism of how the  young soldiers who die at war do not get the recognition or heroic  funeral that they so...              ... a more realistic tone. Like Yeats, Owen uses rhyme,  rhythm and imagery only he makes his more varied, frequent and  complexed. To do this, Owen has used an assortment of literary  devices such as metaphors, similes, personification, onomatopoeia and  alliteration. This helps Owen to elaborate his poem in more serious,  gruesome detail which he often does, even in other literature and a  good example of this would be another poem called ââ¬Å"Dulce et  docormest.â⬠ He has seen the horror and futility of war first hand and  this is reflected through his use of emotive language. The two poems  are diverse to one another as Owen uses numerous amounts of imagery  and has a lack of structure which results in an abundance of emotion  where as Yeats is the complete opposite and comprehends constant  structure and image deficiency which consequently leads to a lack of  emotion.                         
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.