What does the poet refer to ‘Uniforms’ when he says ‘Beneath All Uniforms’? (No men are foreign)
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In this poem, the poet uses “uniforms” to mean both the uniforms worn by soldiers and the varied traditional dresses belonging to different cultures and civilisations of the world, or the different clothes that symbolise who the wearers are. Beneath all uniforms lies the same human body.
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The poet is speaking about the soldier's uniform that they wear during wartime. (ii) The poet suggests that all people on earth are the same as they breathe, buried, wake, sleep, hate, love and labour. The importance of the sun and air and water is equal for everyone.
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