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Beach Burial Kenneth Slessor

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Beach Burial Kenneth Slessor
Beach Burial – Kenneth Slessor
1944

Kenneth Slessor, author of Beach Burial, was the Australian Official Correspondent in El Alamein, the Middle East during WWII. The author drew from his own experiences to write Beach Burial, a poem about the aftermath of a battle during WWII. It is a realistic and somber tribute to soldiers of all nations that died in the war. It illustrates how they are all united by one common enemy; death. It breaks the conventional war poem structure, as it is not a celebration of heroes, and shows no nationalistic or patriotic devotion. Instead, Kenneth Slessor has written about how soldiers lose their identity in war. He has chosen to start the poem lulling the readers into a false sense of calm, and by understating the calamity, we slowly realize he is talking about the dead soldiers, whether it be allies or enemies, being united.
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'The convoys of dead sailors come' imply a repetitiveness and routine in the deaths, where he has dehumanizing them through the blunt language. 'The breath of wet season has washed their inscriptions/As blue as browned men's lips,'. Through his descriptive language and simile, he has illustrated the soldiers washed away, and that their tombstones have no writing on them anymore, making them anonymous. 'Whether as enemies they fought,/Or fought with us, or neither; the sand joins them together,' demonstrates that the men buried in the sands are not only anonymous but are 'joined together' by the sand, whether they were friends or foes. '"Unknown seaman" - the ghostly pencil wavers and fades' gives anonymity, and the word 'ghostly' echoes the deaths. It shows that the pencil is indelible, and that although their bodies will decay, they won't be forgotten because they shall live on through the

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