Answer:
Siegfried Sassoon attempt to provoke angry and compassionate through his poems of the First World War. This provocation brought him public and critical acclaim. Avoiding the sentimentality and jingoism of many war poets, Sassoon wrote of the horror and brutality of trench warfare and contemptuously satirized generals, politicians, and churchmen for their incompetence and blind support of the war. His later poems, often concerned with religious themes, were less appreciated, but the autobiographical trilogy The Complete Memoirs of George Sherston won him two major awards.
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The statement that might be found in the articles on a website authored by Robert Smith is that "C. emotion-arousing language against human cloning."
Here are the following choices:
A. extreme bias favoring <span>anticloning viewpoints
B. one-sided presentation favoring human cloning
C. emotion-arousing language against human cloning
D. opinions favoring human cloning that are not based on facts</span>