One of those killed in the trenches, Isaac Rosenberg, wrote vividly and honestly of the surreal experiences of soldiers on the western front: the "queer sardonic rat" amid the poppies at "Break of Day in the Trenches," naked soldiers, "Nudesstark and glistening, / Yelling in lurid glee," engaged in ''Louse Hunting," the wheels of caissons crunching bones and faces of the newly killed in "Dead Man's Dump." For Wilfred Owen, who met Sassoon while being treated for shell shock, the hell of the war is essentially emotional and psychological rather than physical. The real horror, he writes in "Apologia Pro Poemate Meo," comes from thought and understanding of one's condition in war, "Where death becomes absurd and life absurder." "Insensibility" speaks of the loss of not only feeling and compassion but imagination and mind in battle. And terror at the loss of mind is summed up in the plight of poor Jim told in dialect in "The Chances":
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| | 'e's livin' an' 'e's not; 'E reckoned 'e'd five chances, an' 'e 'ad; 'E's wounded, killed, and pris'ner, all the lot, The bloody lot all rolled in one. Jim's mad.
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For the "Disabled" confined to a wheelchair in a hospital and awaiting an attendant to remember to put him to bed, the final hardship is the terrible indifference of fellow human beings that his condition brings, the loss of beauty and the possibility of warm affection; for the "blind, and three parts shell" who speaks in "A Terre (Being the Philosophy of Many Soldiers)," it would be better to be dead and buried, "Pushing up daisies," as he recalls soldiers saying, than to live disabled, "dead-old," "a dug-out rat": "Friend, be very sure / I shall be better off with plants that share / More peaceably the meadow and the shower." Owen himself escaped both disability and madness; he was killed in action a week before the armistice.
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Some poets who survived continued to cope with their experiences long after the armistice. Ivor Gurney was wounded and gassed and was eventually confined for mental problems for the rest of his life. His were poems recounting times of quiet terror for the soldiers, moments of anticipation within the action when troops on the march notice the sweet air" and experience "homethoughts soft coming," as they anticipate the barbwire and "ditches of heart-sick men" they win soon join at the front ("Towards Liners"), or in "The Silent One," when a soldier quietly refuses to advance the line in the face of certain death:
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