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Poem by Wilfred Owen


Beauty


The beautiful, the fair, the elegant,
Is that which pleases us, says Kant,
Without a thought of interest or advantage.

I used to watch men when they spoke of beauty
And measure their enthusiasm. One
An old man, seeing a () setting sun,
Praised it () a certain sense of duty
To the calm evening and his time of life.
I know another man that never says a Beauty
But of a horse; 

Men seldom speak of beauty, beauty as such,
Not even lovers think about it much.
Women of course consider it for hours
In mirrors; 

A shrapnel ball -
Just where the wet skin glistened when he swam -
Like a fully-opened sea-anemone.
We both said 'What a beauty! What a beauty, lad'
I knew that in that flower he saw a hope
Of living on, and seeing again the roses of his home.
Beauty is that which pleases and delights,
Not bringing personal advantage - Kant.
But later on I heard
A canker worked into that crimson flower
And that he sank with it
And laid it with the anemones off Dover. 



Wilfred Owen

Poem Theme: Beauty

Wilfred Owen's other poems:
  1. Uriconium
  2. Training
  3. Schoolmistress
  4. Cramped in That Funnelled Hole
  5. The Roads Also


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Edward Thomas Beauty ("WHAT does it mean? Tired, angry, and ill at ease")
  • Abraham Cowley Beauty ("LIBERAL Nature did dispence")
  • John Harington Beauty ("Such colour had her face as when the sun")
  • Jones Very Beauty ("I gazed upon thy face—-and beating life")
  • Elinor Wylie Beauty ("Say not of beauty she is good")
  • Mathilde Blind Beauty ("Even as on some black background full of night")

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