The poem after Blenheim do you agree that the poet celebrates war ? do you think it was a famous victory ? why do you think so
Answers
Answered by
8
no I don't think so because a war can never end a problem. The two parties have to understand and solve it. Here the poet one time celebrates the war and secondly it tells that the victory was so wicked therefore it highlighted us our decision in the poem. it also said that lots of fools were died but after all there was a huge loss nothing else.
Answered by
7
Explanation:
The poet does not celebrate war.He poins out how useless and destroying war is. It takes the life of thousands of innocent victims. It cannot be considered as a famous victory. The lives of many people were taken and nothing was gained.The common people suffered while the rulers celebrated the victory. Victory is gained only through saving life.
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