Fd an answer to your qutn expla the exprsn "grimly gay"
Contents:
1. “GRIMLY GAY”
And led the tra wh fac grimly gay. Take the first three l of the poem: the soldiers are sgg, implyg happs, but their fac are ‘grimly gay’, htg at the worry and uncertaty lurkg jt beneath the surface. Answer:For example, the field of poetry, Wilied Owen scrib, the poem The Send-Off the fac of war-bound soldiers as “grimly gay”, two words which one would hardly associate together....
Answer:⭐ For example, the field of poetry, Wilied Owen scrib, the poem The Send-Off the fac of war-bound soldiers as “grimly gay”, two words which one would hardly associate together.... For example, the field of poetry, Wilied Owen scrib, the poem The Send-Off the fac of war-bound soldiers as “grimly gay”, two words which one would hardly associate together.
In this ntext, Owen emphasis the ntradictn between the ner feelgs of the war-bound soldiers, and their outward appearance: the grim outlook they bear towards the apparent doom that awas them at the ont l of war, and how they put on brave and as Owen stat, “gay” onts, to mask their apprehensn. Another oxymoron is ed as the tras members, ie the soldiers are said to look grimly gay. Owen’s referenc to ‘led the tra wh fac grimly gay’ shows that even their happs is tempered by the ong misery of what awas them; though they do not know yet, their liv are gog to be short and full of pa, and Owen sheds light on this by forhadowg this reactn.