Pretty much about Weather.
One of Owen's main things was that he tried to portray the innocence of humanity as a whole- so he hardly ever blames "the Germans" or people, he instead personifies weaponry like in "The Last Laugh" or the weather like in "Exposure"
Owen talks of Dawn having an "army" and points out to the readers back home that war wasn't just dodging bullets, but also surviving the "merciless iced east winds". (example of alliteration.) If you read this you are a sad person don't read anything again
"Exposure" by Wilfred Owen is a war poem that vividly describes the harsh conditions faced by soldiers in the trenches during World War I. The poem conveys the sense of fear, desperation, and isolation experienced by the soldiers as they are exposed to the brutal elements of nature, such as the cold, snow, and wind. Owen also explores the psychological toll of war and the futility of fighting in such harsh conditions.
In "Exposure" the soldiers face extreme weather conditions. The soldiers signed up for a war, knowing that there would be killing and death. However, many probably did not realize the terrors that nature itself could bring. The soldiers faced snow, heavy rain, mud, and cold frosts. The men waited anxiously for action, hearing the noises of war far off in the distance, but everything remained silent around them except for their own anxieties and the weather.
He wrote about WW1 to inform young men on how the war really is; Life-threatening and gruesome.
Sometime during February, 1917
Disabled by Wilfred Owen was written in 1917
spank me
in 1917
Wilfred Owen was an English soldier and poet during WW1. His poem A New Heaven is about soldiers in France wondering about death.
In hospital in Scotland
In "The Send Off" Wilfred Owen is referring to British troops on their way to the battlelines in WWI. Owen fought (and died) in the Great War himself.
Almost all poems of Wilfred Owen were written during the last two years of his life, 1917 and 1918.
Wilfred Owen's birth name is Wilfred Edward Salter Owen.
The tone of "Disabled" by Wilfred Owen is somber, reflective, and melancholic. The poem evokes a sense of loss, sadness, and regret as it portrays the consequences of war on an individual's life.
"The Send-Off" by Wilfred Owen portrays the solemn departure of soldiers to war, highlighting the false sense of glory and patriotism that conceals the grim reality of war. The poem explores the themes of loss, betrayal, and the dehumanizing effects of war on soldiers. Owen emphasizes the haunting contrast between the festive send-off and the grim fate that awaits the soldiers.
He was a poet in WW1 and was best known for his poem 'Dulce et Decorum Est'.
no one can write it for you read poems and annotate!