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Dulce Et Decorum Est

This summary describes Wilfred Owen's poem "Dulce et Decorum Est" which depicts a nightmarish scene of exhausted soldiers struggling through mud and gas during World War I. It describes how the soldiers are warned about an incoming gas attack and hurriedly try to put on their gas masks, but one soldier is too slow and is overwhelmed by the gas as his comrades watch him drown, struggling for breath. They throw his body in a wagon, implying he is left to die. The poem aims to show the graphic realities and horrors of war to argue that it is not at all "sweet and honorable" to die for one's country as was claimed.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
207 views2 pages

Dulce Et Decorum Est

This summary describes Wilfred Owen's poem "Dulce et Decorum Est" which depicts a nightmarish scene of exhausted soldiers struggling through mud and gas during World War I. It describes how the soldiers are warned about an incoming gas attack and hurriedly try to put on their gas masks, but one soldier is too slow and is overwhelmed by the gas as his comrades watch him drown, struggling for breath. They throw his body in a wagon, implying he is left to die. The poem aims to show the graphic realities and horrors of war to argue that it is not at all "sweet and honorable" to die for one's country as was claimed.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Dulce et decorum est

SUMMARY

Wilfred Owen, the poet, tells of his first hand experience in war. He tells the tale of tired and
wounded soldiers walking through dirt and sludge. Suddenly, there is a warning about gas, which
the soldiers hurriedly and awkwardly heed by donning their helmets. Unfortunately, one soldier is
too late in donning the helmet and his companions watch him ‘drowning’ in the gas. The unfortunate
soldier was thrown in the back of a wagon, where it is implied that he was left to die. The persona
points out that if you (the reader/ listener) could have witnessed these events, then you would not
tell children the old lie: dulce et decorum est pro patria mori (It is sweet and honourable to die for
one’s country).

LITERARY DEVICES

1.SIMILE

Stanza 1, line 1: This simile introduces the exhaustion of the soldiers. Stanza 1, line 2: This
emphasizes not only the tiredness of the soldiers, but the fact that they might be sick as well.

Stanza 2, line 19: This device gives a visual image of how the soldier physically reacted to the gas.
Floundering implies flopping about, therefore, the soldier was flopping about violently. We know it
was violent because fire and lime illicit excruciating pain.

Stanza 4, line 39: This device gives a visual image of the expression on the soldier’s face. This is a
particularly grotesque image that highlights the soldier in the throes of death.

Stanza 4, line 39: Cancer is a horrible disease that takes many lives on a daily basis. Therefore, to
compare this dying soldiers face to this disease is to emphasize the agony that the soldier was going
through, which was reflected on his face.

Stanza 4, lines 39-40: This is another graphic comparison that compares the soldier’s face to
incurable sores. ‘Sores’ is a disgusting visual image of degradation which, in turn, highlights the
soldier in the throes of death.

ALLITERATION
Stanza 1, line 7: This device points to the level of fatigue that the soldiers were undergoing. Stanza 1,
lines 7-9: This highlights not only the fatigue that the soldiers were feeling, but the fact that they
were injured as well. Stanza 4, lines 29-30: This device highlights a visually graphic death mask. The
soldier is in the throes of impending death.

IMPORTANT WORDS/ PHRASES


3.‘Bent double’
The soldiers are bent over with fatigue. It is very significant that the poet/ persona initiates the poem
by highlighting the exhaustion of the soldiers. He is trying to emphasize the harsh realities of war.

4.‘haunting flares’
Flares are typically used to signal distress. The flare is fired from a flare gun, in the air, where rescue
crafts, at sea or in the air, can have a general idea of the location of the soldiers who are in distress.
Therefore, to describe the flares as haunting implies that the soldiers are severely distressed by
their situation.
Dulce et decorum est

5.’deaf even to the hoots of tired, outstripped Five-Nines that dropped behind.’
Five-nines are German 5.9 artillery shells. This means that bullets were firing around them while
they were walking. The extent of the soldiers’ tiredness is also emphasized at this point because the
soldiers do not hear the shells going off around them.

6.‘An ecstasy of fumbling’


The word ecstasy, that is used to describe the fumbling, implies the level of panic that this one word
(gas) elicits. The soldiers’ were so tired that they could not even hear the five nines, but this one
word immediately wakes them up.

7.‘Dim, through the misty panes and thick green light, as under a green sea, I saw him
drowning.’
This describes exactly what the outside world looks like through the lens of a gas mask. The effect of
the gas is seen in the mention of the word ‘drown’. It implies that the unfortunate soldier could not
breathe.

8.‘He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning.’


This is the very graphic result of breathing in the gas. It is a very violent reaction, as seen in the word
‘plunge’. The dying soldier did not simply reach for the persona/poet, but he did so in a desperate
manner, while all the time being unable to breathe.

9.‘wagon that we flung him in’ 


The statement implies that the soldier was left for dead in a wagon. No regard was shown to him,
through the use of the word ‘flung’. This implies that war is heartless and tragic.

10.’Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori.’ 


This statement literally means it is sweet and honourable to die for one’s country. The persona/ poet
clearly does NOT believe this to be the case. 

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