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Monday, February 25, 2019

Isc English for 11 and 12 Std

In Church Going, the poet expresses the same disrespectfulness towarfareds church as In Westminster Abbey. The Church, withal known as the house of God, is seen by the poet as a reliable building and all told be a corresponding, another church matting, seats, and nether region any(prenominal) brass and stuff which gives the reader a very dismissive military strength fromthe poet. He agrees with Betjeman that the church disserves no believe or respect Hatless, I take off my cycle-clips in awkward reverence. Instead of commenting on the hit of the church, he looks at the roof asking himself if it is cleaned, or restored It seems that the poet is eventide more(prenominal) disrespectful than Betjeman donating an Irish sixpence and then further emphasizing, reflect the stupefy was not worth stopping for. The poet is for sure that churches leave alone fall depressed except for just about, which will be kept as a continuing symbol where women will introduce their children to touch a particular stone believing that they will work as a spell. His opinion is that superstition, the like belief, must die. This supposes a strong blow once againstthe church and towards believe. Philip Larkin asks himself who will be the last to see the church before it deteriorates completely some ruin-bibber some Christmas-addict someone obsessed with church or someone just like him who has no believe or sympathy withthe church. For the poet, the church is the place of marriage, line of descent and terminal and believes that that causes throng to become fanatic towards church because they see it as the place that marks the most important points of life.Larkin also sees the church move to make people see natural things of life such as birth and having children as being in their destiny and that people will al managements look for the spiritual side. In conclusion, I would say that the poets are conscious of the poetic diction they use in order to bring through their feelings about the church. They do not see any suit or need for which religion and believe exist and want superstition to be gotten rid of.They see the Church as a place, which manipulates people for their own benefit. The use of less poetic devices such as oh attack the Germans in In Westminster Abbey or bored, uniformed, knowing the ghostly silt in Church Going does not suggest that this in any way makes the poems less poetic in any sense at all. conjuration Betjeman and Philip Larkin seem to be wanting the readers to be aware of the church and nurse them from it.Summary Wilfred Owens poem Anthem for Doomed Youth is typical of Owens abrupt, straightforward, and abrasive approach to describing war. Owen states in the poems beginning that soldiers die on the battlefield as cattle in a slaughterhouse with little meaning, and with no love ones there to comfort them. The end of the poem is more sentimental musical composition no funeral takes place on the battlefield, all individ uals have something resembling a funeral, even if it takes the form only of their loved ones weeping.The poems overall tone indicates that Owen resents promoters of war who do not consider the full magnitude of war and pities the soldiers who know not what may happen to them. drawrect Known for his abrasive and heart-wrenching depictions of war, Wilfred Owen is known for way out right to the heart of the reader through his poetry to evoke his or her raw emotions. In the poem, Anthem For Doomed Youth, Owen once again finds the shortest and most abrupt and straight-forward descriptions he possibly can to describe soldiers being slaughtered on the battlefield.Not only is Owen describing their deaths, but he is describing, how they die with unemotionality among them. There is no separate emotion for each man, they die all the same, like cattle going off to the slaughterhouse. The poet appears to be portraying war as a situation that one should avoid, because although one is dying for their country, initially, their death is one of little meaning. They are not among family and..

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