The Tombstone-maker
Siegfried Sassoon
He primmed his loose red mouth and leaned his head Against a sorrowing angel’s breast, and said: ‘You’d think so much bereavement would have made ‘Unusual big demands upon my trade. ‘The War comes cruel hard on some poor folk; ‘Unless the fighting stops I’ll soon be broke.’ He eyed the Cemetery across the road. ‘There’s scores of bodies out abroad, this while, ‘That should be here by rights. They little know’d ‘How they’d get buried in such wretched style.’ I told him with a sympathetic grin, That Germans boil dead soldiers down for fat; And he was horrified. ‘What shameful sin! ‘O sir, that Christian souls should come to that!’
Next 10 Poems
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Triumph
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Troops
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Working Party
- Siegfried Sassoon : Their Frailty
- Siegfried Sassoon : They'
- Siegfried Sassoon : Thrushes
- Siegfried Sassoon : To A Childless Woman
- Siegfried Sassoon : To A Very Wise Man
- Siegfried Sassoon : To Any Dead Officer
- Siegfried Sassoon : To His Dead Body
Previous 10 Poems
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Road
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Redeemer
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Rear-guard
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Poet As Hero
- Siegfried Sassoon : The One-legged Man
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Old Huntsman
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Last Meeting
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Kiss
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Investiture
- Siegfried Sassoon : The Imperfect Lover