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What Is The Tone Of Dulce Et Decorum Est

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In the poem, Dulce et Decorum est, Owen mocks an age old conception, that death in battle is a glorious experience, by juxtaposing it with a recollection of his own, the horrific fate of soldier caught in a gas attack slowly and painfully wasting away in the mud. From the very beginning of the poem Owen paints an experience of exceptional misery with a tone rich with disillusionment, one of men cursing through the sludge as they limp off to battle. A tone of panic then takes over as the author describes the fatigued men, scrambling in the event of a gas attack. Then in the midst of the chaos he sees him. "...Flound'ring like a man in fire or lime", a soldier unable strap his gas mask is now, "..drowning in the thick green sea." The choice

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