‘Anthem for Doomed Youth’

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Presentation transcript:

‘Anthem for Doomed Youth’ This is one of Owen’s best known poems. Its plan is simple. With bitter irony, the first stanza translates the pandemonium of battle into funeral rites for the fallen. The second stanza continues the metaphor in the quiet of a stricken English Village.

‘Anthem for Doomed Youth’ An anthem is usually a hymn to praise or celebrate but in this bitterly ironic title, Owen is criticising the praising of War. ‘Anthem for Doomed Youth’ You wouldn’t usually associate the youth with being doomed, but these men were being sent to their deaths. Owen uses the association of death and youth to show the inhumanity of war.

“What passing-bells for these who die as cattle?” “passing bells” are the bells used to announce a death. When a person died, their body would be taken to a church for the funeral. These rights were not given to the those who died in the war. These men died for their country, yet what funeral right were they given? “What passing-bells for these who die as cattle?”  rhetorical question Simile What image is Owen creating here? The savagery and brutality of war is reflected on in this image of death. Using the word ‘cattle’ is a graphic way of showing how the men had no control over their lives. Like cattle, they were there to be slaughtered.

“Only the monstrous anger of the guns.” Owen asks a rhetorical question before providing the answer. He allows the reader to reflect on the reality of how young men die at war and what sounds after their death is not bells , but.. “Only the monstrous anger of the guns.”  personification Instead of an honourable death, with a funeral and people mourning them, they will just die on the battlefield. No one will come and no one will try and find them.

The imagery Owen uses here appeals to our hearing and sight The imagery Owen uses here appeals to our hearing and sight. Owen recreates the sounds of the battlefield , showing the anger of war with constant “stuttering” of guns killing innocent lives. Alliteration Onomatopoeia “Only the stuttering rifles' rapid rattle  Can patter out their hasty orisons.” Owen uses both alliteration and onomatopoeia to further empathise the firing of the guns. The alliteration mimics the sound of the gun fire. The gun is also personified by using the word “patter”. Their ‘funeral prayers’ need to be completed quickly as there are so many to be said. This empathises the vast number of men killed in battle.

There is no dignity or pleasantries in dying at war There is no dignity or pleasantries in dying at war. No one mourns for our men who have been sent to be slaughtered. There are simply too many for them to be accounted for individuality and for them to all receive the burial they deserve for making the ultimate sacrifice. No mockeries now for them; no prayers nor bells;  Nor any voice of mourning save the choirs, –  Despite Owen’s orthodox Christian upbringing, how his faith actually developed during the last years is far from clear, and it is hard not to think that he was not remembering in this poem those members of the clergy, and they were many, who were preaching not the gospel of peace but of war. The glorious dead will have nothing. No voices mourning them. There will however be choirs. But will these be choirs in the traditional sense?

The only choirs that will be present at these men’s funerals will be the horrific sounds of shells and warfare. Owen is emphasising the tragedy and pity of war. personification “The shrill, demented choirs of wailing shells;  And bugles calling for them from sad shires.”  Raving mad- this highlights the sense that the shells and bombs are completely out of control. Perhaps there is no controlling the madness of war. Many men came from the English counties and countryside. Bugles were sounded, calling them and encouraging them to go to war, to their deaths. There is solemn tone here heightening the sense of sadness.

The juxtaposition of "choirs" and "wailing shells" is a startling metaphor, God’s world and the Devil’s both as one; after which line 8 leads into the sestet with the contrasted, muted sound of the Last Post. Juxtaposition: an instance of placing close together or side by side esp. for comparison or contrast.

“What candles may be held to speed them all?” Will anyone light a candle for each of the men who gave their life? “What candles may be held to speed them all?”  Owen is again emphasising the pity of war.

Why does Owen use the word “boys”? “Not in the hands of boys but in their eyes  Shall shine the holy glimmers of goodbyes.”  The last sights these men would ever see would be the horrors and pity of war. The image here is of the tearful eyes of the soldiers, glittering like candles as they go towards their doom.

Flowers suggest beauty and sadness. paleness Coffin cloth The pallor of girls' brows shall be their pall;  Their flowers the tenderness of patient minds,  Flowers suggest beauty and sadness. They patiently wait for their men to return.

And each slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds. Aptly, dusk is falling in the last line and speaks of finality. The dusk is slow, for that is how time passes for those who mourn, and with the drawing down of blinds and the attendant sadness. And each slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds. We may think of a house in Shrewsbury where at the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month a telegram was delivered that informed Wilfred Owen’s parents of his death just a week earlier.

In ‘Anthem for Doomed Youth’ we see the main image is the funeral service that was not given to soldiers for their bravery and help to the country, instead Owen compares a burial to what happened out on the battlefield. The first verse was lively with gunfire; the imagery appeals to hearing and sight. The second verse we see that there are no aural images. It is a much more silent and quiet verse, trying to show the sadness of war. Owen was trying to show the sadness of war. Anthem for Doomed Youth is mainly about young, brave soldiers not getting a proper funeral service. There are images of death, sounds of gunfire and bells. Owen felt sorrow for those killed out on the battlefield for their country, not getting the treatment/funeral they deserve for their ultimate sacrifice.