Trench conditions
The squalid, dangerous conditions of trench warfare—mud, cold, disease, death, claustrophobia, stalemate—as represented in WW1 poetry and prose. Trench imagery became central to war literature's critique of warfare's reality.
Real World
At the Battle of Passchendaele (1917), soldiers drowned in waterlogged shell craters — the mud Owen describes in 'Dulce' is not metaphor but documented historical reality that killed men before any enemy bullet.
Exam Focus
Ground trench imagery in specific textual detail; vague references to 'horrible conditions' score poorly — quote and analyse the precise language.
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