If World War First had a voice, we can say that it was Wilfred Owen, employed in active service, singing about the horrors of war and killed in action. In his brief life time, only four of his poems were published, but after his death, dozens of them were published and brought out as books. It is believed, many of them have not still come to light. Awarded the Military Cross for bravery posthumously, he passed away in poetic anonymity, knowing not about the fame that was to come to his name in future. Speaking for men in the trenches under his leadership was what he did through his poems, which, it seems, were all written during the last two years of his life, 1917 and 1918. Born in the year 1893, it seems he was 34 or 35 years old when he wrote the poem Futility.
Wilfred Owen was around 24 years old when he wrote the poem "Futility" in 1917.
Wilfred Owen died on November 4, 1918 at the age of 25.
Most of Wilfred Owen's famous poems were written during World War I, between 1917 and 1918. Owen's war poetry, which vividly captured the horrors and realities of combat, gained recognition posthumously after his death in combat in November 1918.
He would be exactly 118 years old.
Wilfred Owen died on November 4th 1918 (i.e. just a week before Armistice) aged 25. He was shot in the back of the head whilst helping the men in his platoon cross the Sambre Oise canal. His parents Tom and Susan Owen received the telegram to say he had been killed after the Armistice had been signed, although Wilfred's brother Harold would later claim he had known all along that Wilfred was dead, owing to his seeing a ghostly apparition of Wilfred in uniform at around the time he was killed.
Wilfred Owen was born on March 18, 1893, so if he were alive today, he would be 128 years old.
Move him into the sun Gently its touch awoke him once, At home, whispering of fields unsown. Always it woke him, even in France, Until this morning and this snow. If anything might rouse him now The kind old sun will know. Wilfred Owen, from "Futility"
He's dead; he died a week before the end of World war 1
he was 22
Wilfred Owen was a British poet and soldier who served in World War I. He experienced the harsh realities of trench warfare, including the horror of chemical gas attacks. His experiences influenced his poetry, which often depicts the brutality and futility of war. Owen was tragically killed in action just days before the Armistice was signed in 1918.
Wilfred Edward Salter Owen, on the 21st October 1915, aged 22, he enlisted in the Artists' Rifles Officers' Training Corps.He was killed on the 4th November 1918, almost an hour before the Armistice was signed that brought the war to an end. He was 25 when he died.
Wilfred Owen enlisted in the British army in 1915 and began his military service during World War I. He spent time in the trenches on the Western Front before being invalided back to England due to shell shock.
Wilfred Owen wrote "Futility" to convey the senselessness and waste of war, questioning the purpose and value of life in the face of death on the battlefield. The poem reflects Owen's anti-war sentiments and his disillusionment with the glorification of war.