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  2. William Wantling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Wantling

    Much of his poetry deals with his time spent in Korea during the war. Pusan Liberty is a first person account of the life of a heroin dealer in Pusan, South Korea. And without laying claim is a short and shocking poem about the indifference with which the American forces treated killing.

  3. Soldier's Dream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soldier's_Dream

    Soldier's Dream is a poem written by English war poet Wilfred Owen.It was written in October 1917 in Craiglockhart, a suburb in the south-west of Edinburgh (Scotland), while the author was recovering from shell shock in the trenches, inflicted during World War I.

  4. W. D. Ehrhart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W._D._Ehrhart

    Ehrhart has been called "the dean of Vietnam war poetry." Donald Anderson, editor of War, Literature & the Arts , said Ehrhart's Vietnam–Perkasie: A Combat Marine Memoir , is "the best single, unadorned, gut-felt telling of one American's route into and out of America's longest war."

  5. Submarines (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Submarines_(poem)

    Submarines" is a poem written by Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936), and set to music by the English composer Edward Elgar in 1917, as the third of a set of four war-related songs on nautical subjects for which he chose the title "The Fringes of the Fleet". [1] Like the others in the cycle, is intended for four baritone voices.

  6. List of war poets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_war_poets

    Siegfried Sassoon, a British war poet famous for his poetry written during the First World War. This is a partial list of authors known to have composed war poetry.

  7. John Musgrave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Musgrave

    He enlisted with the Marine Corps just after graduating from high school. He was a member of the 1st Battalion, 9th Marines. He served in Vietnam for 11 months and seventeen days before being permanently disabled by his third wound at the battle of Con Thien in November 1967. He was medically retired as a corporal in 1969. [1]

  8. Our Hitch in Hell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Our_Hitch_in_Hell

    "Our Hitch in Hell" is a ballad by American poet Frank Bernard Camp, originally published as one of 49 [1] ballads in a 1917 collection entitled American Soldier Ballads, that went on to inspire multiple variants among American law enforcement and military, either as The Final Inspection, the Soldier's Prayer (or Poem), the Policeman's Prayer ...

  9. Dulce et Decorum est - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dulce_et_Decorum_est

    The speaker of the poem describes the gruesome effects of the gas on the man, and concludes that anyone who sees the reality of war at first hand would not repeat mendacious platitudes such as dulce et decorum est pro patria mori: "How sweet and honourable it is to die for one's country". Owen himself was a soldier who served on the front line ...