(Wilfred Owen) He wrote about this horrifying experience to his mother, “A big shell lit on the top of the bank, just 2 yards from my head. Before I awoke, I was blown in the air right away from the bank! I passed most of the following days in a railway Cutting, in a hole just big enough to lie in, and covered with corrugated iron.” (Wilfred Owen: Letters) All of these experiences traumatized Owen, who later was admitted to Craiglockhart War Hospital after he was diagnosed with “shell shock”. While at the hospital, he met poet Siegfried Sassoon, who encouraged him to write poetry about his experiences in the war. It was during his recovery from “shell shock” that he had written most of his poetry, which was largely anti-war and about the suffering of soldiers. One of his most notable poems, “Dulce Et Decorum Est”, is about the horrible and gruesome experience of British soldiers being attacked with chlorine gas, with one soldier unable to get his mask on in time. The soldier is described as, “the white eyes writhing in his face, / His hanging face, like a devil’s sick of
(Wilfred Owen) He wrote about this horrifying experience to his mother, “A big shell lit on the top of the bank, just 2 yards from my head. Before I awoke, I was blown in the air right away from the bank! I passed most of the following days in a railway Cutting, in a hole just big enough to lie in, and covered with corrugated iron.” (Wilfred Owen: Letters) All of these experiences traumatized Owen, who later was admitted to Craiglockhart War Hospital after he was diagnosed with “shell shock”. While at the hospital, he met poet Siegfried Sassoon, who encouraged him to write poetry about his experiences in the war. It was during his recovery from “shell shock” that he had written most of his poetry, which was largely anti-war and about the suffering of soldiers. One of his most notable poems, “Dulce Et Decorum Est”, is about the horrible and gruesome experience of British soldiers being attacked with chlorine gas, with one soldier unable to get his mask on in time. The soldier is described as, “the white eyes writhing in his face, / His hanging face, like a devil’s sick of