Thursday, January 23, 2020

Comparing The Charge of The Light Brigade, War and A Wife in London. Es

Comparing The Charge of The Light Brigade, War and A Wife in London. Select three poems from the selection, which are concerned with different aspects of war. Write about and compare the poems in respect of the following:  ¨ The views of war that the poets are expressing  ¨ The tones and atmospheres of the poems  ¨ The ways in which language and rhythm are used to reinforce the poets’ themes and viewpoints  ¨ Any other factors considered important. The three poems that I have chosen are: â€Å"The Charge of The Light Brigade†, â€Å"War† and â€Å"A Wife in London†. I chose each of them for different reasons, but mainly because they each look at very different aspects of the war and the poets all have completely different attitudes to war. â€Å"The Charge of The Light Brigade† is an exultant poem, concerned with the glorified aspect of war, that all men are heroes, brave and courageous for fighting for their country. It is about a suicidal, yet heroic battle fought by the British Cavalry in 1854. A mistaken command received by a superior sent, unquestioning, 600 horsemen charging into the head of a valley bristling with artillery and nearly all of them ‘fell’. â€Å"War† is set ‘behind the scene’ and concerns itself with the people who dealt with the consequences of war - the doctors and orderlies. It is a moving poem and shows the reader how bad conditions were in South Africa. It is about the dedication of people to try and save the â€Å"Case† (patients) and prevent them from turning into another â€Å"It† – yet another dead body. The poet, Edgar Wallace was a medical orderly himself, so he would have had first hand knowledge of how bad conditions and casualties could get. â€Å"A Wife in London† deals with the suffering... ...ng in the tent and during the â€Å"War!† – â€Å"the part that is not for show†, â€Å"a very unhealthy trade† and â€Å"Orderly, clean this knife!†. These each have a way of opening a window into this little part of the war and gives us an understanding of how horrible it is, with the never-ending stream of casualties and reports back home in newspapers that are not allowed to show anything against war (â€Å"the part that is not for show†). Each of the three poems, haunts the reader after a reading or two, whether for good 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 much glory it is given as in â€Å"The Charge of The Light Brigade†. I am against the waiting and mourning for those left behind as in â€Å"A Wife in London†. Moreover, I am most definitely against the loss of fathers, sons, brothers and husbands.

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