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Essay- Unseen Poetry- "Anthem for Doomed Youth" (Wilfred Owen)

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2024/2025

This is an essay analysing an unseen poem ("Anthem for Doomed Youth" by Wilfred Owen) for A Level English Literature. I have included a clean copy, an annotated version, and an essay plan. This essay received an A+ grade. Happy studying!

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Subido en
6 de julio de 2025
Número de páginas
11
Escrito en
2024/2025
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Ensayo
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Grado
A+

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Read “Anthem for Doomed Youth” by Wilfred Owen. In this poem, the
speaker considers the experience of war. Analyse the poetic methods
used by Owen to explore the thoughts and feelings of the speaker.


​ In “Anthem for Doomed Youth”, Owen explores the pointlessness of war
by lamenting the meaningless deaths of young soldiers. This is conveyed to
the reader in the title, where the adjective “doomed” indicates that such
tragedy is inevitable during war. In focusing on the impact of the conflict,
Owen heavily focuses on the impact of death. Therefore, the poem may be
read as an elegy for the countless deaths experienced during war. The lack of
a single subject emphasises the mass destruction of the conflict. However,
more specifically, Owen writes a sonnet to reflect on the sense of mass
mourning. This is significant as the loose iambic pentameter represents the
heart of English poetry, where the rhythm expresses the deep emotions of the
speaker. This accentuates the sense of grief which flows throughout the
poem. As this poem is written in the third-person by an omniscient narrator,
the reader may interpret that Owen portrays a universal international grief
which always follows a war.


​ Throughout the octave, Owen focuses on the violence which exists as a
result of conflict and the resulting inevitable death. The opening rhetorical
question of “What passing bells for these who die as cattle?” challenges the
reason behind conflict by arguing that it is not worth the loss of human life.
The simile likens the victims of war to cattle, and this animalistic imagery
suggests to the reader that the victims of war are often dehumanised, shipped
off and killed to serve some higher power’s purpose without empathy or care.


​ Owen continues by saying “-Only the monstrous anger of the guns. /
Only the stuttering rifles’ rapid rattle”. The dash at the beginning of the poem’s
second line indicates the harsh interruption (and, often, permanent end)
brought to young life by war and conflict. This connotes a sense of futility to

, the reader, and Owen builds a frustrated tone to express his anger with the
pointlessness and cruelty of war. The guns are personified, described as
angry beings. This reflects how people, particularly world leaders, avoid
responsibility for war, as Owen implies that the conflict is beyond human
control. In this way, Owen dehumanises the process of war, demonstrating
how society becomes desensitised to violence when faced with conflict. The
end-stopped line emphasises the lack of control that the soldiers have in war,
as though they are fully controlled by their weapons. The pointlessness of the
conflict is emphasised by the repetition of “only”. In this way, Owen suggests
that death is the only true product of war, and that any attempt to gain glory or
victory through conflict must be futile. This is supported by the cacophony
throughout the stanza, which reflects the wild violence and senseless brutality
of a battlefield. The alliteration also builds tension, portraying the young
soldiers as panicked men to the reader. Therefore, Owen suggests that only
pain and suffering can come from war, not success.


​ Owens continues to use death to represent the futility of war, lamenting
the fact that the soldier will have “No mockeries now for them; no prayers nor
bells; / Nor any voice of mourning”. The negative repetition implies to the
reader that the only legacy of war is loss. This reflects Owen’s opinion that
conflict is a needless tragedy. This is emphasised by the caesural pause,
which emphasises the extent of the loss of life. Owen mourns the lives that the
young soldiers will not be able to live, and he portrays war as a waste of this
young life. Through the use of this list, Owen builds pathos around this
“Doomed Youth”, evoking pity from the reader which mirrors his own sense of
sadness and disapproval in relation to war and conflict.


​ Owen describes “The shrill, demented choirs of wailing shells; / And
bugles calling for them from sad shires”. The use of militaristic language
(“shells… bugles”) creates a semantic field of war, allowing Owen to express
his deep grief in response to the accompanying loss of life. In a crude sense
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