. This is bundle 1 and offers excellent value for money. Owen personally fought as a soldier in World War One, where the huge loss of life (for very little territorial gain) was frequently criticised. This showed the journey of the army. This allows students to understand how to structure their arguments to achieve full marks. Although this battle had no real influence on the outcome of the war it showed the bravery of six hundred British soldiers who charged into almost certain death. At the end of the essay is the mark as well as a detailed comment analysing the students strengths and weaknesses. Owen also uses a few bits of onomatopoeia which is used to let people associate the images with sounds while reading the poem. Personification is used throughout both poems however it is used most in Exposure. The poem praises the Brigade, celebrating the sacrifice they made for the country. The "light brigade" shows all British soldiers. Personally I emphasise more with Owens poem as I feel that he brings a raw poem of the bad sides of war which I think is needed to show how bad war is as Tennyson just praises war. He uses words like the flickering gunnery rumbles These words mixed with strong adjectives such as flickering can give readers an extensive sensory view of the scene Owen is describing. My resources are written specifically for the Grade 9-1 GCSE Exams and designed to help students develop their knowledge. The essay is around 2200 words. With the diction and rhythm used in the story of a gas attack paired with figurative language, Owen brings his audience into the war with him and proves that it is anything but sweet to die for ones country. Exposure is very long-winded, dull, dark and gloomy, but The Charge of the Light brigade, although with the same ideas of how horrific war is, is more fast and active. Did wonder if youd written similarly on any of the other poems in Power and Conflict? Question: Compare how poets present the effects of war in 'Bayonet Charge' and in one other poem from 'Power and conflict'. This poem follows the journey of a light brigade of some 600 British soldiers as they charge head-first into the cannons and gunfire of a much-larger Russian army. Weir uses imagery in "Three days before Armistice Sunday and already poppies had been placed on individual war graves." With the caesura here indicating that there is some finality about this action. document.getElementById( "ak_js_1" ).setAttribute( "value", ( new Date() ).getTime() ); Why I loveComparing poems Exposure and Charge of the LightBrigade, Why I loveClosed Book for GCSE Literature, Why I loveHow What Why Emotional Response for Analysis, Why I loveChallenging perceptions of drugs with students, Why I loveConsidering Evaluation Style Questions, Why I love Writing at the same time as the class, Why I love Religion in A Christmas Carol, Why I loveEngagement in Y13 & Hamlet Podcasting, Why I love The Power of Three for Revising, Why I love Going back to basics: Instructions, Why I love Shakespeare (& think teaching it is so important), Why I loveConsidering Leadership Qualities, Why I loveEaster & reading: the Carnegie shortlist, Why I love Engaging Revision or The Final Push, Why I love Thinking about Transactional Writing, Why I love Developing 2A: Non-Fiction Reading Unit @Eduqas_English, Why I loveEncouraging Revision @Eduqas_English, Why I love teaching the Language Reading Paper, Why I love Assessment policy development for the New GCSE @Eduqas_English, Why I love Considering Context @Eduqas Poetry Anthology, What I love about unpicking the Eduqas Language Fiction Paper 1A (A4 & A5 Only), What I love unpicking the Eduqas Language Fiction Paper 1A (A1 A3 Only), Why I love thinking about classroom displays, Why I love #lovetoRead My Desert Island Books, Why I loveThe A5 Fiction/A4 Non-Fiction Evaluation Question, Why I LoveBlog Series 18: Mametz Wood By Sheers, Why I love Scaffolding the Tension and Drama Structure Question for @Eduqas_English, Why I loveScaffolding: Language Analysis Questions, Why I loveBlog Series: Introducing Context (War focus), Why I loveScaffolding: Comprehension A1 Fiction Language @Eduqas_English, Why I loveBlog Series 17: Ozymandias by Shelley, Why I LoveBuilding Girls Confidence: My #WomenEdSW session, Why I loveStrategies for stretch and challenge, Why I love Developing Analysis using Triplets, Why I loveBlog Series 16: Dulce et Decorum Est by Owen, Why I Love Blog Series 15: Afternoons by Larkin, Why I love Vocabulary Improvement Strategies, Why I loveBlog series 14: To Autumn by Keats, Why I loveEmbedding Knowledge Organisers into learning, Why I loveWhole Class Feedback & Other Time-Saving Feedback Strategies, Why I loveBlog Series 13: Hawk Roosting by Hughes, Why I Love Live Modelling for across the curriculum, Why I loveBlog Series 12: Death of a Naturalist by Heaney, Why I loveBlog Series 11: A Wife in London by Hardy, Why I loveBlog Series 10: Valentine by Duffy, Why I loveEduqas Blog Series 9: Cozy Apologia by Dove, Why I loveEduqas Blog Series 8: As Imperceptibly as Grief By Dickinson, Why I loveLiterature Examiner key considerations, Why I loveEduqas Anthology: Blog Series 7 Living Space by Dharker, Why I loveUnpicking the Eduqas Examiners report Literature, Why I loveUnpicking the Eduqas Examiners report Language, Why I loveEduqas Anthology: Blog Series 6 She Walks in Beauty Byron, Why I loveEduqas Anthology: Blog Series 5 The Soldier by Rupert Brooke, Why I loveEduqas Anthology: Blog Series 4 London by Blake, Why I loveEduqas Anthology: Blog Series 3 Sonnet 43, Why I loveEduqas Anthology: Blog Series 2 The Manhunt, Why I loveComparing poems The Process of teaching comparison COTLB & Exposure, Why I loveComparing poems The Process of teaching comparison COTLB &Exposure, Why I loveA Christmas Carol Revision & the feedback lesson The importance of theGhosts, Why I love AQA Comparisons Series: An Introduction susansenglish, Why I loveComparison Collection Power & Conflict AQA susansenglish, Why I loveEngaging with AO3: Embedding Context, Why I love Retrieval linked to planning and essays using carousel for Animal Farm, Why I loveExplicit planning for Literature GCSE, Why I love A slightly more independent student led approach to AQA Power and Conflict Anthology, Why I lovePromoting independence through teaching the P&C Anthology, Why I love Revisiting my Unseen Poetry Approach, Why I loveSummarising the AQA Literature Exam Reports; 19thC, Modern Texts, Poetry Anthology, Shakespeare and Unseen Poetry, Why I loveSummarising the AQA Language Paper 1 and 2 Exam Report. Also that grey is a dull colour which could show that nothing was happening and that the soldiers were just stood their shivering and slowly dying. The repetition of the half-line to end each stanza, with the phrase But nothing happens recurring throughout the poem reinforces this sense of stasis. Just come across this comparison of Exposure and TCOTLB. Part of English Literature Anthology Three: Conflict Revise. 'Charge of the Light Brigade' is a fast moving poem made up of six stanzas with rhyming in each. Many times in the poem the collective pronouns we and our are used to reinforce the fact that this is not just an individual experience of suffering but rather an experience that bonds the soldiers together in their suffering. While The Charge of the Light Brigade has a completely different tone, one of bravery and glory and no poignancy.