Dulce Et Decorum Est by Wilfred Owen Summary and Analysis

Summary and Analysis of Dulce Et Decorum Est by Wilfred Owen


Relevant Background

Wilfred Owen served as a Lieutenant in the British army during the First World War, ironically he was killed shortly before the Armistice was signed.
Wilfred Owenโ€™s Dulce Et Decorum Est is a compelling poem trying to depict the helplessness of soldiers caught in a Gas Chamber. The poet describes the general condition of the men involved in the war, their condition after a shock of a gas attack and then describing the effect of it on someone who lives through it.

Stanza- Wise Summary

Stanza 1 โ€“ describes the condition of the men

The poem begins with a description of a group of soldiers retreating from the front lines of the battlefield. The soldiers are bent over with fatigue and are compared to โ€˜old beggars under sacksโ€™ clearly indicating the crippled state of the soldiers in the war. They are unable to walk because of their ill-health. The soldiers are coughing like โ€˜hagsโ€™ and kept on cursing and walking through the โ€˜sludgeโ€™. The men are exhausted โ€˜men marched asleep.โ€™ Many of the soldiers have lost their boots, are seen limping on โ€˜blood shodโ€™, heightening the grim scene. โ€˜Allโ€™ of them were lame and blind. The hyperbole here emphasizes the terrible condition that the men were in. The repetition of the fatigued state of the soldiers is evident throughout the first stanza, โ€˜old beggars under sacksโ€™, โ€˜men marched asleepโ€™, and then in the final lines of the stanza, โ€˜Drunk with fatigue.โ€™ The soldiers are so tired that they did not hear the droppings of the Five-Nines (gas shells) behind them.

Stanza 2 โ€“ describes the gas attack

Someone notices the gas shell and shouts, โ€˜Gas! Gas! Quick boys!โ€™ The soldiers are immediately transported into an โ€˜ecstasy of fumbling.โ€™ They are in a hurry to put on the mask before the deadly poison can take their lives. All except one are successful. He was found โ€˜yelling and stumbling/ And floundering like a man in fire or lime.โ€™ The narrator looks back and finds the soldierโ€™s protective mask being engulfed into the โ€˜green seaโ€™. The narrator and the other comrades look upon the โ€˜helpless sightโ€™ of the soldier dying in agony, โ€˜he plunges at me guttering, choking and drowning.โ€™

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Stanza 3 โ€“ recurring dream

Owen makes it clear in this two-line stanza that he canโ€™t stop dreaming about the soldierโ€™s horrific death. This probably links to the neurasthenia (shell shock) he developed.

Stanza 4 โ€“ dying soldier

Mood and Tone

The mood of the poem is reflective. The poet is thinking about his own condition in First World War.

The tone of the poem is both ironical and sarcastic. The poet tries to present the realities of war through images and haunting words which on the other hand contradict the reality. It is indeed not sweet to die for oneโ€™s country.

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Use of Imagery

What is most noticeable to the readers in Owenโ€™s poetry is the vividness of his imagery. Dulce Et Decorum Est is full of fine imagery. The poet had been successful in bringing the horrors of the war come alive to the eyes of the readers. Some of the imageries presented in metaphors, others are presented in graphic language that describes the scene as the narrator sees it or remembers it.

Some of the imageries are discussed below:

โ€œWe cursed through sludgeโ€ captures and presents the frustrations of the men who were mentally and physically drained of their energies as they marched across the battlefield.

To describe the difficulty faced by the soldiers who have lost their boots, the poet uses imagery to intensify the
moment, โ€œBut limped on, blood-shod.โ€™ This imagery graphically represented the condition of the menโ€™s feet. A sense of pity is felt by the readers reading those lines.

Other phrases vivid with imagery are โ€œwhite eyes writhing in the faceโ€, โ€œblood gargling out from the forth-corrupted lungsโ€, โ€œfloundering like a man in fire or lime.โ€
All these imageries are intended to contrast with the Latin maxim from which the poemโ€™s title has been taken, Dulce Et Decorum Est that is โ€œSweet and Properโ€ to undergo the disembodiment, suffering and death for oneโ€™s own country.

Alliteration:

Alliteration is the close repetition of the consonant sounds at the beginning of words to facilitate narration.

Examples of alliteration in the poem are

  • Knock kneed
  • Watch the white eyes writhing in the face
  • Dulce Et Decorum Est

Simile:

A simile is a figure of speech in which two dissimilar objects are compared and the comparison is made clear by the use of terms like โ€˜likeโ€™, โ€˜such asโ€™ and so on. Examples of similes in Dulce Et Decorum Est are:

  • โ€˜Bent double, like old beggars under sacksโ€™
  • โ€˜coughing like hagsโ€™
  • โ€˜His hanging face, like a devilโ€™s sick of sinโ€™

Allusion:

Allusion is a reference to other works or cultures in prose and poetry. Here, allusions in the poem are in Line 20 and Line 27-28. In line 20, there is an allusion to the devil- that is evil.

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In lines 27-28, the allusion is the most quoted lines of the 20th century.

Neoligism:

A new word โ€“ โ€˜bloodshodโ€™ sounds like blood shot so emphasizes the exhaustion that the men felt. Also, it relates to the word โ€˜shodโ€™ which means wearing shoes. It helps to dehumanise the soldiers as it is something you โ€˜doโ€™ to horses. It also helps to create the image of the men staggering along โ€˜lameโ€™ after many had โ€˜lost their bootsโ€™ bloody and painfully.

Transferred epithet:

In a transferred epithet the adjective or adverb is transferred from the noun it logically belongs with, to another one which fits it grammatically but not logically. So in โ€œdreamless nightโ€, dreamless is a transferred epithet. The exact meaning of the sentence is โ€œnight when I (or whoever) slept without dreaming,โ€ since a night canโ€™t actually dream anyway. Foolish idea: It is not the idea itself that is foolish, but the person who comes up with it. She rubbed her sleepy eyes: Her eyes are not sleepy; she is. Knowing smile: The smile itself does not know, it is the person who smiles that knows.

โ€˜clumsy helmetsโ€™ is used by Owen to highlight the panic that the men are in during the gas attack.

Personal pronouns:

1st person โ€“ โ€˜Iโ€™, โ€˜meโ€™, โ€˜myโ€™

2nd person โ€“ โ€˜Heโ€™

3rd person โ€“ โ€˜Youโ€™ โ€˜my friendโ€™

In the poem, he uses the first, second and third persons. He uses, for example, โ€œweโ€ in lines 2,3 and 18, and โ€œIโ€ in line 14, โ€œmyโ€ (line 15) and โ€œmeโ€ (line 16). We find the second person singular when he wants to make us think and make a reflection of the cruel reality of wars, for example: in lines 21 and 25.

Eventually, we can see the third person singular in the first stanza when he is describing how the soldiers were going to fight (their physical problems).

He uses the past and the present tenses. We can see the first person when he is describing the action of the poem, whereas we find the present tense when he talks about his dream (that man yelling out in his nightmare) to emphasise that it is a persistent affliction. As a curiosity, we must say that the โ€œyouโ€ whom he addresses in line 17 can imply people in general but also perhaps, one person in particular, the โ€œmy friendโ€ identified as Jessie Pope. Jessie Pope for one perhaps, his appeal to whom as โ€œmy friendโ€ is doubtless ironic.

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