Upon one's first consideration of Wilfred Owen's poem, "Dulce Et Decorum Est", the form<span> it takes appears conventional. ... However, a more significant formal feature of "</span>Dulce Et Decorum Est<span>" is the fact that Owen makes it look like a </span>poem<span> written in Iambic Pentameter.</span>
Motif<span> and </span>theme<span> are linked in a literary work but there is a difference between them. In a literary piece, a </span>motif<span> is a recurrent image, idea or a symbol that develops or explains a </span>theme<span> while a </span>theme<span> is a central idea or message.</span>