Friday, October 25, 2019
The Portrayal of War in On the Idle Hill and The Destruction of Sennach
The Portrayal of War in On the Idle Hill and The Destruction of Sennacherib    The structure of these 2 poems are similar but comparisons can be made  between "On the idle hill" and "The destruction of Sennacherib"  Although the content is similar the title, tone, language, devices,  structure and punctuation are very different.    In the early 1800's when Byron wrote "The destruction of Sennacherib"  a large war campaign was occurring; The Napoleonic Wars. The wars  surrounding him would effect his view on war. In the late 1800's when  Housman wrote "On the idle hill", no major battle was occurring.  However, ironically within 20 years of this poem more "lads" were  being sent to the slaughter in World War One.    The titles of the two poems are very different. "On the idle hill"  portrays a very passive image, whereas "Destruction of Sennacherib" is  very active. Byron's poem is a stereotype of war. The title shows  action and it brings a sense of all encompassing. Whereas "On the idle  hill" shows laziness as "idle" personifies the hill making the start  of the poem peaceful and natural. This image contradicts war, which is  very ironic.    The two poems by Byron and Housman portray war. "On the idle hill" is  a very natural affair. "The Destruction of Sennacherib" is a very  violent and graphic event. Both of the poems show the beginning and  the end of the battle and misses out the actual war. This firstly  leaves the battle to the readers imagination so it can be interpreted  differently, and secondly it makes the reader concentrate of the  consequences. Although Byron's poem doesn't show the battle it has a  brutal and horrific image of the aftermath, "the foam of his gasping  lay white on the turf." This makes the battle s...              ...ay. "On the Idle hill"  finishes with two war instruments calling back from the battle. This  may be reflecting back to the initial dreamy state. When it says,  'woman bore me, I will rise' it can be read in many different ways. It  can be read into as a warning that war may rise again because it is  inevitable. Or it can alternatively be read as there being a female  influence in nature that will rise up. Altogether it is a positive  ending that shows Humanity versus evil. "The Destruction of  Sennacherib" has a very religious ending. It ends with the all the  soldiers dead. God killed the Assyrians because they killed the holy  people. There is a strong reference to nature that may be a reference  to God, 'Hath melted like snow'.    Both of the poems are ended extremely differently, "On the idle hill"  is optimistic and "Destruction of Sennacherib" is pessimistic.                        
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