Charge of Light Brigade
Essay by ziggycollins • June 9, 2013 • Essay • 890 Words (4 Pages) • 1,341 Views
Men need to stop and realize the amount of freedom they have to do as they please. They should be thankful for the ability to explore around and meet new people in the world. This amount of freedom would be impossible without our soldiers fighting battles. The brave men who sacrifice their lives in order for people to live the way they do. Lord Tennyson's poems "The Merman" and "The Charge of the Light Brigade" relates to the men of today even from the Victorian period. The poems of Lord Tennyson have described the men of today from the past, and what the deeper meaning to the poem is.
The Charge of Light brigade, written by Lord Tennyson, explains the battle that occurred that the world will never forget. The story begins with 600 soldiers getting ready to go to battle. The commander instructs them commands. Not a single solider got discouraged or distressed by the commands. The soldiers then realized that the commander made a horrible mistake. The solider must obey all duties, so they followed orders and rode their horses into valley of death. The soldiers assaulted with shots of the cannons all around them. Still, they rode courageously forward toward their death. The soldiers struck the enemy guns with unsheathed swords while the rest of the world starred in wonder. They rode into artillery smoke and broke through enemy lines. Then they rode back from the offensive, but they lost so many men, "not the 600 anymore." Cannons behind and on both sides. As the brigade rode back from the mouth of hell, soldiers and horse collapsed while few remain. The world adored the courage and glory. The 600 men remain worthy of honor and tribute.
The speaker of the poem has someone telling the story from what happened in the past. The person telling the story seems proud of what the brigade overcame. Lord Tennyson tells the story. He wrote this during the Victorian period about a British battle. The speaker's tone comes off as brave and hopeful at first. But then it dies down to a sad tone because of how the brigade loses but kept going. "There's not to make reply, Theirs not to reason why, theirs but to do or die" sticks out in the poem as having a deep meaning of what the poem rally's all about. The phrase "into the valley of death rode the 600" repeats itself multiple times to let you know when it transitions to the death of the soldiers. The images of cannons surrounding soldiers fill the mind. Soldiers riding boldly through shots and flashing their sabers bear. Allot of imagery and alliteration throughout the poem on the battle field descriptions. The brigade symbolizes bravery and the valley of death represents sacrifice. The occasion of the setting is important because you need to understand what the meaning of this battle is and how it impacts all the soldiers through the valley of death. Stated by PoetryEserver, the theme of the poem is war happens all around us. It touches the people across the world, but sometimes it can be heroic. The whole word should
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