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Exposure by Wilfred Owen - EdexcelStructure and language

In Exposure, Wilfred Owen looks at the horrors of warfare. The poem鈥檚 content, ideas, language and structure are explored. Comparisons and alternative interpretations are also considered.

Part of English LiteraturePoems

Structure and language

Structure

The poem is structured as a series of eight of five lines. The last line of each stanza is noticeably shorter and indented which emphasises its importance. It is also part of the more general disruption of the rhythmic structure which uses as its basis. Many of these short lines are either or the repetition of the phrase 鈥楤ut nothing happens鈥. Both have the effect of emphasising the apparent pointlessness of what is going on.

The first four lines of each stanza follow the rhyming pattern of abba. This regularity emphasises the unchanging nature of daily life in the trenches. Closer inspection shows that many of the rhymes do not quite work as full rhymes eg: knive us/nervous, wire/war, brambles/rumbles. Owen is employing a technique known as . This helps to unsettle the reader and defy the expected outcome, something which again echoes the experience of war.

Language

Jigsaw showing how to form an answer talking first about the poet's intention, then using a quote and finally explaining its effect

In contrast to the brutalities of the war, the vocabulary Owen uses is sophisticated. The most notable feature of the language is Owen鈥檚 skilful use of and .

A particularly effective example of alliteration comes in the fourth stanza with the repetition of the letters 's', 'f' and 'w':

Sudden successive flights of bullets streak the silence.
Less deadly than the air that shudders black with snow,
With sidelong flowing flakes that flock, pause, and renew,
We watch them wandering up and down the wind鈥檚 nonchalance,
But nothing happens.

Extract from 'Exposure'

The repeated use of the 鈥榮鈥 sound reminds the reader of the bullets which are whizzing past the ears of the soldiers. As the lines follow one another so, gradually, the 鈥榮鈥 sounds fade away; just as the hail of bullets would do. Intertwined into the same stanza are two other careful uses of alliteration as Owen uses the repeated 鈥榝鈥檚 on the third line and 鈥榳鈥檚 of the fourth line to form intricate word patterns.

The poignant misery of dawn begins to grow鈥
We only know war lasts, rain soaks

Extract from 'Exposure'

A clear example of assonance can be found in the third stanza where the sound of a long 鈥榦鈥 in the words 'soak', 'know' and 'grow' emphasises the slow tedious wait for something to occur. This same long 鈥榦鈥 sound occurs again in the sixth stanza.