Of Being Numerous

Monday, March 20, 2006

Charge of the Light Brigade as Anti-War?

My first post arises from a thread on the foetry message board...

I always felt that Tennyson's "Charge of the Light Brigade" was an anti-war poem. A friend argues the opposite, stating that the poem reflected the jingoistic nature and sentimentality of Victorian England. What do you think?

I wrote in the foetry thread:
Why some feel that the poem reflects the jingoism and "pro patria mori" of Victorian England, I don't understand. Given the social strictures of 19th century Britain, the criticism of the generals in the second verse ("Not tho' the soldier knew, Someone had blunder'd") was an indictment itself and makes it necessarily anti-war a la Hamuburger Hill in Full Metal Jacket -- both visions made a distinction between the folly of the commanders and the bravery of the doomed soldier (a theme often alluded to in all anti-war literature, movies, etc.)

Click here for the text. What do you think? Did they have anti-war sentiments during Victorian times, beyond the obvious? Were there any protests or organizations?

I've expanded on some of these ideas on my blog over at the small press exchange. Click here.

Welcome to my blog!

Well, I'm taking the plunge. Welcome to Of Being Numerous, an irregular look into the random ramblings of a mad poet.

In this blog, I hope to give some commentary on current events, a little poetry, a little rant about my day, a little humor -- in other words, a little bit of everything.

I had planned on hosting this on my own site, but I can't figure out the FTP settings for my DotEasy account. If anyone knows that, PLEASE let me know!! The way things stand, I won't even be able to see this blog from work, because of the filtering system that the school uses. I'm not going to do the whole biography thing right now.

If I'm doing this blog thing right, you'll know a lot about me soon, just from reading the blog. Suffice to say, I'm 36, married, and have a youngster on the way.

That's it for the intro -- stop by in the future for some real commentary.