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Anthem for D oomed Youth -Owen, 1917

Anthem for Doomed Youth

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Anthem for Doomed Youth. -Owen, 1917. Poetic Techniques Definition. Alliteration - The repetition of initial consonant sounds Assonance - The repetition of vowel sounds. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 2: Anthem for Doomed Youth

Poetic Techniques DefinitionAlliteration - The repetition of initial consonant sounds

Assonance - The repetition of vowel sounds.Metaphor - A comparison between two objects with the intent of giving clearer meaning to one of them. Often forms of the "to be" verb are used, such as "is" or "was", to make the comparison.Onomatopoeia - The use of words which imitate sound.Personification - A figure of speech which endows inanimate objects with human traits or abilities. Repetition - the repeating of words, phrases, lines, or stanzas.

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Simile - A comparison between two objects using a specific word or comparison such as "like", "as", or "than".Stanza - a grouping of two or more lines of a poem in terms of length, metrical form, or rhyme scheme.Cacophony A discordant series of harsh, unpleasant sounds helps to convey disorder.Enjambment: The continuation of the logical sense — and therefore the grammatical construction — beyond the end of a line of poetry. Personification: the act of attributing human characteristics to non-human things.Rhyming Couplet: a pair of lines that rhymeDirge: A musical lament for the dead.

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Poem DefinitionsBugle: like a trumpet, commonly used in battle announcementsDemented: insane or mentally illMourning: state of sorrow over the death or departure of a loved onePall: burial garment in which a corpse is wrapped; is a cloth which covers a coffin at funeralsPallor: unnatural lack of color in the skin

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The StoryForm:Purpose:Tone:Characters:Setting:Title:

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Stanza OneWhat passing-bells for these who

die as cattle?Technique: Simile

Effect: Comparing soldiers to cattle suggests that they similarly are herded onto the battlefield and slaughtered in masses. The simile takes away from them the human quality of being loved and cared for as individuals.

Mourning rituals

Technique: Rhetorical QuestionEngages

reader to consider his argument

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Only the monstrous anger of the guns.    Only the stuttering rifles' rapid rattleCan patter out their hasty orisons.Technique: Repetition

Technique: Alliteration

Effect: These lines answer the rhetorical question of the first line. He creates imagery of the battle field. The repetition of “Only the” exaggerates the minimalist nature of a soldier’s “funeral”. The imitation of sound conveys the cacophony of the battlefield for readers. It is all negative.

Technique: Personification

Technique: onomatopoeia

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No mockeries for them from prayers or bells,    Nor any voice of mourning save the choirs,—The shrill, demented choirs of wailing shells;    And bugles calling for them from sad shires.Technique:

RhymeEffect: the rhyme of bells and shells suggests that one is a direct replacement of the other.

Technique: ContrastEffect: the contrast between the first two lines of what is missing and what they have illustrate how far circumstances are outside of “normal”.

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What candles may be held to speed them all?    Not in the hands of boys, but in their eyesShall shine the holy glimmers of good-byes.Technique: Rhetorical

questionTechnique: ImageryTechnique: Religious ThemeEffect: suggests that their death is a

waste. Not only is a life gone, but those at home are left to mourn without closure. Moreover, the anonymity makes it so that it appeals to all readers—not just a specific few.

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   The pallor of girls' brows shall be their pall;Their flowers the tenderness of silent maids,And each slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds.Translation: the unnatural shade of

girls’ brows shall be the ornamental funeral blanket.Technique: Word Choice—girls

boysEffect: reinforces the helplessness of killing the young. Technique: Imagery

Effect: Gives the poem a slight sense of closure, but does not ignore the loss and waste of lives. Or, on ther other hand, I suggests that towns are closing their blinds and ignoring the realities of war.

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Other PointsAn anthem is a Christian song of praise, but this sonnet takes this idea and ironically uses the form to point to loss of a whole generation of youth due to warIt is a poem that recreates de-humanizing and wasteful scenes of war in an attempt to shock the audience. There are parallels of death on the battlefield and at home churches. Each is treated uniquely: harsh realism for battle and empathy and compassion at home. This change is reinforced in the rhyme scheme and meter.