A Whispered Tale
Siegfried Sassoon
I’d heard fool-heroes brag of where they’d been, With stories of the glories that they’d seen. But you, good simple soldier, seasoned well In woods and posts and crater-lines of hell, Who dodge remembered ‘crumps’ with wry grimace, Endured experience in your queer, kind face, Fatigues and vigils haunting nerve-strained eyes, And both your brothers killed to make you wise; You had no babbling phrases; what you said Was like a message from the maimed and dead. But memory brought the voice I knew, whose note Was muted when they shot you in the throat; And still you whisper of the war, and find Sour jokes for all those horrors left behind.
Next 10 Poems
- Siegfried Sassoon : A Working Party
- Siegfried Sassoon : Absolution
- Siegfried Sassoon : Aftermath
- Siegfried Sassoon : Alone
- Siegfried Sassoon : An Old French Poet
- Siegfried Sassoon : Ancestors
- Siegfried Sassoon : Ancient History
- Siegfried Sassoon : Arcady Unheeding
- Siegfried Sassoon : Arms And The Man
- Siegfried Sassoon : At Carnoy
Previous 10 Poems
- Siegfried Sassoon : A Wanderer
- Siegfried Sassoon : A Subaltern
- Siegfried Sassoon : A Poplar And The Moon
- Siegfried Sassoon : A Mystic As Soldier
- Siegfried Sassoon : A Letter Home
- Siegfried Sassoon : A Child's Prayer
- Sappho : You May Forget But
- Sappho : You Know The Place: Then
- Sappho : Yes, Atthis, You May Be Sure
- Sappho : Words