Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Futility - Wilfred Owen
Anlagen:
- Form and Structure
- Poem is
an elegy
Anmerkungen:
- Elegy - A poem or song composed especially as a lament (expression of grief) for a deceased person.
- Two stanzas
- Half rhymes throughout
- Title
- Pointlessness of life
- Anti-proper gander
- War is pointless
- Pointless/useless
- Language
- Imagery
- 'Are limbs'
- Two meanings for
'limbs'
- Branches of a
tree
- Fits into nature
theme
- Paired
appendages
- Legs and arms
- 'Woke once the clays of a cold star.'
- Oxymoron
- Contrasts with the sun
- Consonance - hard sounds
- 'At home, whispering of fields half-sown'
- 'half-sown' unfinished like his life
- farmer - could have been his profession before the war
- 'whispering' is onomatopoeia
- 'Think how it wakes the seeds'
- 'wakes' - brings to life
- 'seeds' - metaphor for young men and their potential
- Poetic Techniques
- Personification
- 'Move him into the sun, Gently its touch awoke him once'
- Sun is also a metaphor for giver of life
- Warmth and light
- 'Gently' contrasts with battlefield and war
- Both stanzas begin with a command
- 'Move him'
- Direct address
- 'him' represent any soldier
- Can't move himself
- 'Think'
- Question
- 'Was it for this the clay grew tall?'
- Mud - comes from the earth
- Biblical reference - genesis 2.7
- Man comes from the earth
- 'To break earths sleep at all?'
- Comparision
- Falling Leaves
- Has a nature theme
also
- Subject and
Themes
- Nature themes and
imagery
- Wilfred Owen was on the front line but
he chose to write about grief and despair
instead of violence and horror