The Soldier by Rupert Brooke: Read by Sophie Okonedo | Remembering World War 1 | More 4
The Soldier by Rupert Brooke: Read by Sophie Okonedo | Remembering World War 1 | More 4
Remembering World War 1
Some of Britain’s finest actors read poetry from World War I
http://www.channel4.com/programmes/remembering-world-war-i/4od
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#SophieOkonendo
Absolutely beautiful and heartfelt reading of a poem, also beautifully written, but one I've never quite liked the sentiment of. Not because of the English this or English that, he was an English man after all writing about what he saw as the virtue of his homeland within the backdrop of an international war. No, it's when you read poems by the likes of Wilfred Owen that you might find the "prescription" (so to speak) for this way of viewing war. If my memory serves me I think this was written at the beginning of the conflict. And even if it wasn't it doesn't really change the meaning or sentiment or the beautiful, though perhaps a bit naive, mindset. But I'm no mind reader. And while Wilfred Owen calls "Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori" the "old lie", which I would generally agree with, I sure as hell honor those who give there lives for said sentiment. Besides, I'm not the arbiter of the true meaning or inner workings and thoughts of the author so that kind of judgement ought to be given slight regard at best. Again, a beautiful poem that I've never heard read with such a perfect cadence. Lovely.
Is this supposed to be ironic? This woman has no English blood at all.
Sean yg pedo deng
Alvar pedo
Sean ambatekam
Sean ganteng banget
Sean ganteng banget sumpah gak boong
Beautiful…so well read
If you’re a English soldier and you didn’t believe you fought for England. Then what did you truly fight for ?
Dulce et decorum est. The plan lie. And yet we are still doing this to this day. I feel like we ate on a conti ual spin cycle. Utterly si kened.
DULCE RST
“a pulse in the eternal mind”. This line is a sledgehammer to the heart.
xxddxdxxddx
Ce poème aurait dû être récité par Richard Burton, dommage qu'il n'existe point d'enregistrement. C'est un étrange choix d'interprète, on ne sent pas l'amour viscéral intrinsèquement lié à sa Terre d'Angleterre, c'est dérangeant de sentir la main mise du politiquement correct actuel alors que ce poème en est l'exact contraire. En France nous avons eu droit a l'humiliation d'une danse africaine en hommage à nos ancêtres morts dans les tranchées alors qu'il fallait une danse folklorique de toutes les régions !
A beautiful recital. Truly beautiful.
It is a wonderful sentiment, that a soldier, who gave everything and who now lays as dust on a foreign field, might still have a positive influence on those who walk above them. Thanks for the great reading.
Superb rendition.
Am I the only one who doesn't like this poem and prefer dolce et decorum est (school made me study this poem)
Cringe
I am a veteran and I will be giving this reading next week. I looked this poem up for pointers on pacing. There are countless articulate currently serving white male officer infanteers who could have read this. You went with lefty lovey black male and female actors who don't much care for our country or it's armed forces. Shame on you Channel 4.
Not quite race and gender swapping Rupert Brooke but doing the best they can. Channel 4 Marxists doing their best to undermine and demoralise us.
No black or women infanteers in the British Army in France in WW1. Take your woke messaging crap elsewhere.
What a wonderful rendition of this wonderful poem