Villon
Siegfried Sassoon
They threw me from the gates: my matted hair Was dank with dungeon wetness; my spent frame O’erlaid with marish agues: everywhere Tortured by leaping pangs of frost and flame, So hideous was I that even Lazarus there In noisome rags arrayed and leprous shame, Beside me set had seemed full sweet and fair, And looked on me with loathing. But one came Who laid a cloak on me and brought me in Tenderly to an hostel quiet and clean; Used me with healing hands for all my needs. The mortal stain of my reputed sin, My state despised, and my defild weeds, He hath put by as though they had not been.
Next 10 Poems
- Siegfried Sassoon : Vision
- Siegfried Sassoon : What The Captain Said At The Point-to-point
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- Siegfried Sassoon : Wind In The Beechwood
- Siegfried Sassoon : Wirers
- Siegfried Sassoon : Wisdom
- Siegfried Sassoon : Wonderment
- Siegfried Sassoon : Wraiths
- Delmore Schwartz : A Dream Of Whitman Paraphrased, Recognized And Made More Vivid By Renoir
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- Siegfried Sassoon : Two Hundred Years After
- Siegfried Sassoon : Twelve Months After
- Siegfried Sassoon : Trench Duty
- Siegfried Sassoon : Tree And Sky
- Siegfried Sassoon : Together
- Siegfried Sassoon : To-day
- Siegfried Sassoon : Today
- Siegfried Sassoon : To Victory
- Siegfried Sassoon : To My Brother
- Siegfried Sassoon : To Leonide Massine In Cleopatra