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Wilfred
Owen was born the 18th of March 1893 in Oswestry (United
Kingdom). He was the eldest of four children and brought
up in t he
Anglican religion of the evangelical school. For an evangelical,
man is saved not by the good he does; but by the faith he
has in the redeeming power of Christ's sacrifice. Though
he had rejected much of his belief by 1913, the influence
of his education remains visible in his poems and in their
themes: sacrifice, Biblical language, his description of
Hell.
He moved
to Bordeaux (France) in 1913, as a teacher of English in
the Berlitz School of Languages; one year later he was a
private teacher in a prosperous family in the Pyrenees.
He enlisted
in the Artists' Rifles on 21st October 1915; there followed
14 months of training in England. He was drafted to France
in 1917, the worst war winter. His total war experience
will be rather short: four months, from which only five
weeks in the line. On this is based all his war poetry.
After battle experience, thoroughly shocked by horrors of
war, he went to Craiglockhart War Hospital near Edinburgh.
In August
1918, after his friend, the other great War Poet, Siegfried
Sassoon, had been severely injured and sent back to England,
Owen returned to France. War was still as horrid as before.
The butchery was ended on 11th November 1918 at 11 o'clock.
Seven days before Owen had been killed in one of the last
vain battles of this war.
ANTHEM
FOR DOOMED YOUTH
What
passing-bells for these who die as cattle? -
Only
the monstrous anger of the guns.
Only
the stuttering rifles' rapid rattle
Can patter
out their hasty orisons.
No mockeries
now for them; no prayers nor bells;
Nor any
voice of mourning save the choirs, -
The shrill,
demented choirs of wailing shells;
And bugles
calling for them from sad shires.
What
candles may be held to speed them all?
Not in
The hands of boys but in their eyes
Shall
shine The holy glimmers of goodbyes.
The pallor
of girls' brows shall be their pall;
Their
flowers the tenderness of patient minds,
And each
slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds.
The
Stalemate and the War of Attrition
One
of the defining facts of The Great War was the industrial
production of munitions, and relative modern transport systems.
This made the support of these great armies possible, and
consequently the astonishing levels of death and destruction.
Twentieth century defensive weapons such as the machine
gun, close proximity artillery, mortars, barbed wire, was
attacked by Victorian offensive weapons and strategies.
The outcome was obvious and inevitable. Great progress in
modern offensive weapons were made, but generals whose grasp
of military strategy was still in the days of the Crimea
used them ineffectively, and then disregarded them when
the outcome was not the desired one. The tank was such at
the Somme, by trying to use them after the great barrages
when all the earth was chewed up and muddy, the tanks just
got bogged down. The Germans however were very impressed
by the British tanks, as was demonstrated 24 years later
in a very different Battle of France, Blitzkrieg.
What
price Victory?
Before the
Somme a few people were beginning to call for a peace settlement
between the Allies and Germany. After the Somme many people
started to take up this cause and a few believed that the
war was being pursued for reasons other than for which it
had begun. The rational behind the initial conflict was
based on a balance of power between two alliances preventing
war. Unfortunately at least one side felt they had a military
superiority and the conflict began. The Falkenhayn attack
at Verdun was based on the premise that victory could be
achieved by drawing the French into such a terrible battle
that they would sue for peace. By the end of the November
1916 both sides had lost a million men. Such was this war
that it was obvious no one could win, and all would loose.
Calls
for a Peace Settlement
Bertrand
Russell, the philosopher, set out his anti war opinions
in his essays, Justice in War Time. "The real motive
which prolongs the war is pride. Is there no statesman who
can think in terms of Europe, not only of separate nations?
Is our civilisation a thing of no account to all our rulers?
..I hope that somewhere among the men who hold power in
Europe there is at least one who will remember - . that
we are the guardians not only of the nation, but of that
common heritage of thought and art and a humane way of life
into which we were born, but which our children may find
wasted by our blind violence and hate ". Russells support
of conscientious objectors led to his prosecution under
D.O.R.A (Defence Of the Realm Act, an act of parliament
effectively outlawing any criticism of the government and
it's pursuance of the war). The voice of protest also had
an eloquent outlet in The Nation, a weekly periodical edited
by H. W. Massingham. One of his editorials discussed the
effect of violence on society: "Force has taken a new
place in our lives and transformed our outlook in subtle
and manyfold ways that defy analysis. The return to the
civilian mind, to persuasion, to government by frank and
tolerant opinion will nowhere be easy." In an article
called "Pale for Weariness," Massinghain described
the effect of war on Europe at the end of 191 6. "Europe
is tired out... not only is the best blood of Europe being
spilled without ceasing in the trenches but the vitality
of the remaining millions is being immeasurably drained
by the constant demand for guns, for shells, and for
supplies. Millions are being racked by anxiety as to a loved
one's fate... The Europe of the Great Peace will be a sickly
and enfeebled continent the flower of its youth will have
withered where it grew, and the spring will have vanished
from its year. Pale from the loss of blood will our new
world be; pale also for weariness. Lastly there was pressure
for a negotiated peace from within the Government itself.
In November, 1916, a Memorandum was circulated within the
Cabinet by Lord Lansdowne, Minister without Portfolio. He
foresaw social and economic disaster if the war continued.
"What does prolongation of the war mean? Our own casualties
already amount to over 1,100,000. We have had 15,000 officers
killed ... We are slowly but surely killing off the best
of the male population of these islands... The financial
burden which we have already accumulated is almost incalculable.
We are adding to it at the rate of £5,000,000 a day. Generations
will have to come and go before the country recovers from
the loss ... Can we afford to go on paying the same price
for the same sort of gain?
Such protests received little sympathy in 1916. As the sufferings
of war increased, attitudes hardened. Sylvia Pankhurst described
how a pacifist meeting was broken up. "Poorly
clad women with pinched, white faces and backs bent by excessive
toil, their eyes flashing and fists clenched, rushed out
from their hovels screaming, 'No peace without victory!
We want peace on our terms!' . . . Saddest of all were the
degraded, the starved and shabby, who rushed intoxicated
from the public houses demanding that the entire German
population should be 'wiped out!' Sometimes they would attempt
a tipsy war dance in the midst of the crowd. The conscientious
objectors bore the brunt of public hostility. They were
tongue lashed by the chairmen of Tribunals. "A man
who would not help defend his own country and womankind
is a coward and a cad. You are nothing but a shivering mass
of unwholesome fat." Lloyd George led the campaign
against them with the chill promise, "I shall consider
the best means of making the lot of that class a hard one."
The minority of "absolutist" objectors, who refused
any war service, were sometimes subjected to considerable
brutality. Some were shipped to France, where refusal to
obey orders meant the death penalty. The scandal about these
men caused the Daily News to ask, "Where are we drifting?"
The Prosecution of the War was now being driven
by the lowest common denominator - public opinion supported
by the gutter press!
There were how ever voices of dissent that could not
be ignored or written of as cowards, the serving men themselves,
especially ones who were highly decorated in battle. The
most famous being the two War Poets; Siegfried Sassoon and
Wilfred Owen. Sassoon who had been awarded the Military
Cross for saving wounded men became a fervent opponent of
the war and was helped by Bertrand Russell. Sassoon on recovering
from wounds refused to go back to France and had a statement
read in Parliament.....
Finished
with the War
A Soldier's Declaration,
I
am making this statement as an act of wilful defiance
of military authority, because I believe the war is
being deliberately prolonged by those who have the
power to end it.
I am a soldier, convinced that I am acting on behalf
of soldiers. I believe that this war, upon which I
entered as a war of defence and liberation has now
become a war of aggression and conquest. I believe
that the purposes for which I and my fellow soldiers
entered upon this war should have been so clearly
stated as to have made it impossible to change them,
and that, had this been done, the objects witch actuated
us would now be attainable by negotiation.
I have seen and endured the suffering of the troops,
and I can no longer be a party to prolong these sufferings
for ends which I believe to be evil and unjust. I
am not protesting against the conduct of the war,
but against the political errors and insincerity's
for which the fighting men are being sacrificed.
On behalf of those who are suffering now I make this
protest against the deception which is being practised
on them; also I believe that I may help to destroy
the callous complacence with which the majority of
those at home regard the continuance of agonies which
they do not share, and which they have not sufficient
imagination to realise.
S.
Sassoon, July 1917
Unfortunately
the voices of dissent were not heeded and the war
continued until the jingoism was replaced by despair
on one side and civil unrest in Germany brought the
war to a close
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