Exposure Flashcards

1
Q

Who wrote Exposure?

A

Wilfred Owen

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2
Q

What is the opening line, which implies that it is about a shared experience?

A

“Our brains ache”

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3
Q

What quotation, in stanza one, shows that nature is personified and shown to be attacking the soldiers?

A

“in the merciless iced east winds that knive us”

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4
Q

What type of punctuation shows that the soldiers are waiting for something to happen - but it never does?

A

ellipses …

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5
Q

What emotions are used to show the reason why their brains hurt?

A

“confuse/worried/curious/nervous”

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6
Q

What short, simple half line emphasises boredom and tension and is repeated throughout the poem?

A

“But nothing happens”

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7
Q

What quotation uses “brambles” of the barbed wire to remind us of the pain caused by nature?

A

“like twitching agonies of men among its brambles”

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8
Q

What quotation uses assonance and onomatopoeia to create a vivid aural description of the battle field?

A

“flickering gunnery rumbles”

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9
Q

What quotation is a biblical reference to Mathew 24:6, where Jesus foretells the end of the world?

A

“like a dull rumour of some other war”

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10
Q

What rhetorical question asks what the point of it all is?

A

“what are we doing here”

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11
Q

What quotation shows that dawn is personified and that it normally brings hope, however not in this case?

A

“dawn massing in the east her melancholy army”

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12
Q

What quotation is a description of dawn approaching which mirrors the soldiers in the trenches?

A

“ranks on shivering ranks of grey”

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13
Q

What does the colour “grey” have connotations of?

A

no colour - the battlefield is cold and lifeless. Grey was the colour of the Germans uniforms so this aligns nature with the enemy

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14
Q

What quotation uses sibilance to mimic the whistling sound of bullets flying?

A

“sudden successive flights of bullets streak the silence”

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15
Q

What does the quotation “black with snow” suggest?

A

That snow is normally white and symbolises purity but here it is black which symbolises death and evil

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16
Q

What quotation used alliteration to emphasise the relentlessness of the snow?

A

‘flowing flakes that flock”

17
Q

What quotation shows the snowflakes being personified - maliciously seeking the men’s faces?

A

“pale flakes with fingering stealth come feeling for our faces”

18
Q

What quotations use half-rhyme to link between their current situation and their dreams of the past?

A

“snow-dazed” and “sun-dozed”

19
Q

What rhetoric question is an answer to the question in stanza 2?

A

“is it that we are dying?”

20
Q

What quotations uses assonance of the “oh” sounds to make the imagined journey seem painful and slow?

A

“slowly” “ghosts” “home” “glozed”

21
Q

What quotation is a metaphor which shows that they look like jewels which are precious but cold?

A

“crusted dark-red jewels”

22
Q

What quotation has frequent caesuras which reflect the soldier’s concerns that people back home were losing interest in their fate?

A

“shutters and doors, all closed: on us the doors are closed, -“

23
Q

What quotations suggests the soldiers believe they’re sacrificing themselves in order for life at home to be preserved?

A

“since we believe not otherwise can kind fires burn; nor even suns smile true on child, or field, or fruit.”

24
Q

What quotation implies that the soldier’s love for God is disappearing or God’s love for them is disappearing?

A

“for love of God seems dying.”

25
Q

What quotation uses vivid imagery of what exposure to the cold does to the soldiers bodies?

A

“shrivelling many hands, puckering foreheads crisp”

26
Q

What metaphor refers to the eyes of the dead and the living and shows that the soldiers lose the feeling of emotion due to the fact they’re overpowered by nature?

A

“all their eyes are ice”

27
Q

What quotation in the final stanza ends the same way as the first stanza, suggesting that even death doesn’t change anything?

A

“But nothing happens”

28
Q

What is the form of exposure?

A

Present tenses, first person plural. Regular rhyme scheme reflecting urge monotonous nature of the men’s experiences

29
Q

What is the structure of exposure?

A

8 stanzas - no real progression. The last stanza ends with the same as the first one, showing the monotony of life in the trenches and the absence of change

30
Q

What is the mood/tone of exposure?

A

suffering/boredom/hopelessness