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The nation was gripped by the war and was pushed to believe the war was an easy tackle, a war that would only take a few weeks a war that would end all wars.
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The New Technology of War
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The Night Before.
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The North Sea
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The Outsider: A Critical Comparison Between Futility by Wilfred Owen and Dead Man’s Dump by Isaac Rosenberg
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The Photographic Reality of the Battle of Antietam
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The play ‘The Long, The Short and the Tall’, is set in the Malayan Jungle in 1942, it is a War – Drama. The play is about an inexperienced patrol of British soldiers
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The poem " Dulce et Decorum Est " by Wilfred Owen
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The poem " Dulce et Decorum Est " by Wilfred Owen.
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The poem "Dulce et Decorum Est" was written in 1917 (during the WWI) by British soldier, Wilfred Owen.
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The poem Dulche et Decorum Est is about Wilfred Owen (a war poet) who describes in his own experiences, what the war was like.
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The poem I am analyzing is "Ex-basketball Player" by John Updike.
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The poem I am writing about are '' The Charge Of The Light Brigade'' by Tennyson and'' Dulce ET Decorum Est.'' by Wilfred Owen.
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The poem that I have chosen to analyse is "Exposure" by Wilfred Owen.
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The poem, "The Horses" by "Edwin Muir" is mainly about the effects of nuclear war and the adaptability mankind needs to survive them.
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The poems Dulce et decorum est, The Send-off and Anthem for Doomed Youth were all written by Wilfred Owen in response to his experience in WWI. Examine the views and attitudes the poet conveys in at least two of the poems.
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The poems Fall In, The Soldier and Dulce et Decorum Est are all poems and World War 1. Discuss the different attitudes towards war expressed in them.
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The poems I refer to are "the charge of the light brigade" by Alfred, lord Tennyson relating to the Crimean war (1854) and "Dulce Et Decorum Est" by Wilfred Owen relating to the first world war (1916).
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The poems Joining the Colours and The Send-off both discuss, young, guileless boys marching off to war. The Send-off is written by Wilfred Owen, and ex-soldier, which explains why the reader acquires a deeper understanding
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The Poems of World War One Can Be Broadly Divided into Three Waves of Sentiment: Recruitment, Experience and Futility - Using at least one poem from each category, show how the attitudes to war changed and are reflected in the work of the war poets.
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The poems that I will discuss, are ’Charge of the Light Brigade’ by Alfred, Lord Tennyson and ‘Dulce Et Decorum’ by Wilfred Owen. Wilfred Owen was actually a fighter in the war, where as Alfred, Lord Tennyson
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The Poetry of World War One
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The Poetry of World War One
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The poets at the beginning of the first world war portray unrealistic attitudes towards war, and as Houseman states "They saved the sum of things for pay" sarcastically insinuating that our soldiers risked their own lives for money.
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The poets Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon write about war in different ways. Explore a selection of their poems on the subject of war highlighting the differences and similarities, if you discover any.
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