The Investiture
Siegfried Sassoon
God with a Roll of Honour in His hand Sits welcoming the heroes who have died, While sorrowless angels ranked on either side Stand easy in Elysium’s meadow-land. Then you come shyly through the garden gate, Wearing a blood-soaked bandage on your head; And God says something kind because you’re dead, And homesick, discontented with your fate. If I were there we’d snowball Death with skulls; Or ride away to hunt in Devil’s Wood With ghosts of puppies that we walked of old. But you’re alone; and solitude annuls Our earthly jokes; and strangely wise and good You roam forlorn along the streets of gold.
Next 10 Poems
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Kiss
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Last Meeting
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Old Huntsman
- Siegfried Sassoon : The One-legged Man
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Poet As Hero
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Rear-guard
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Redeemer
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Road
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Tombstone-maker
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Triumph
Previous 10 Poems
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Imperfect Lover
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Hero
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Heritage
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Hawthorn Tree
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Goldsmith
- Siegfried Sassoon : The General
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Fathers
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Effect
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Dug-out
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Dreamers