Planning an essay
How might you plan your essay in response to this question?
Read the poem, Exposure by Wilfred Owen. Write about the ways in which Owen presents the realities of war in this poem.
You could approach your plan by:
- re-reading the poem, thinking about the effect it has on you and what effect it might have on other readers
- highlighting the key words in the question
- creating a draft of your plan
Example plan
What to include | Textual reference/ quotations to include | Notes | |
Introduction | Poem about horrors of war - direct and hard hitting. Surprising as it's about waiting and effects of cold, not fighting itself. | Title can be read in different ways - exposure to cold, to terrifying war situation for soldiers or exposing truth to people at home. | Keep it short, show overall understanding and direction of essay. Owen is showing horror of war not glory. |
Paragraph one | Content and detail - mention of cold, feelings of men, how all hope has left them, they feel they are dying. | eg 'merciless iced east winds’, ‘mad gusts’, ‘nervous’, ‘is it that we are dying?’ | Focusing on content of poem shows overall understanding of poem’s message. |
Paragraph two | Strong, insistent language throughout. | eg repetition of ‘But nothing happens’ and ‘dying’. Negative language - ‘agonies’, ‘melancholy’, ‘cringe’. | Focus on specific powerful language and overall effect. |
Paragraph three | Use of figurative language to convey horrors, use of different senses. | eg similes ‘like twitching agonies’, ‘like a dull rumour’. | Link to effect, eg similes convey horror - helps reader to feel this. |
Paragraph four | Structure and rhyme/sounds. | eg regular stanzas and repetition, hard-hitting monosyllables, short final lines in each stanza. | Link structure to effect - reality of war is stark and unrelenting. |
Conclusion | Many realities of war shown, some are surprising - nothing happens but still mem feel they are dying. | May not need more references in conclusion. | Refer back to key words in question - realities of war. Shows understanding of the poem and of it being hard-hitting. |
Introduction | |
What to include | Poem about horrors of war - direct and hard hitting. Surprising as it's about waiting and effects of cold, not fighting itself. |
Textual reference/ quotations to include | Title can be read in different ways - exposure to cold, to terrifying war situation for soldiers or exposing truth to people at home. |
Notes | Keep it short, show overall understanding and direction of essay. Owen is showing horror of war not glory. |
Paragraph one | |
What to include | Content and detail - mention of cold, feelings of men, how all hope has left them, they feel they are dying. |
Textual reference/ quotations to include | eg 'merciless iced east winds’, ‘mad gusts’, ‘nervous’, ‘is it that we are dying?’ |
Notes | Focusing on content of poem shows overall understanding of poem’s message. |
Paragraph two | |
What to include | Strong, insistent language throughout. |
Textual reference/ quotations to include | eg repetition of ‘But nothing happens’ and ‘dying’. Negative language - ‘agonies’, ‘melancholy’, ‘cringe’. |
Notes | Focus on specific powerful language and overall effect. |
Paragraph three | |
What to include | Use of figurative language to convey horrors, use of different senses. |
Textual reference/ quotations to include | eg similes ‘like twitching agonies’, ‘like a dull rumour’. |
Notes | Link to effect, eg similes convey horror - helps reader to feel this. |
Paragraph four | |
What to include | Structure and rhyme/sounds. |
Textual reference/ quotations to include | eg regular stanzas and repetition, hard-hitting monosyllables, short final lines in each stanza. |
Notes | Link structure to effect - reality of war is stark and unrelenting. |
Conclusion | |
What to include | Many realities of war shown, some are surprising - nothing happens but still mem feel they are dying. |
Textual reference/ quotations to include | May not need more references in conclusion. |
Notes | Refer back to key words in question - realities of war. Shows understanding of the poem and of it being hard-hitting. |
Feedback
The plan above has a very clear structure which addresses different aspects of the poem in a logical sequence. It has a wide range of short textual references to back up the points made. It clearly links all comment on form, structure and language to the effect they have in the poem. In addition to this, all the points are linked back to the original question – this demonstrates a clear understanding of what is being asked.