Siegfried Sassoon

To a Very Wise Man

                                          I

 
Fires in the dark you build; tall quivering flames
In the huge midnight forest of the unknown.
Your soul is full of cities with dead names,
And blind—faced, earth—bound gods of bronze and stone
Whose priests and kings and lust—begotten lords
Watch the procession of their thundering hosts,
Or guard relentless fanes with flickering swords
And wizardry of ghosts.
 

                                          II

 
In a strange house I woke; heard overhead
Hastily—thudding feet and a muffled scream...
(Is death like that?) ... I quaked uncomforted,
Striving to frame to—morrow in a dream
Of woods and sliding pools and cloudless day.
(You know how bees come into a twilight room
From dazzling afternoon, then sail away
Out of the curtained gloom.)
 

                                          III

 
You understand my thoughts; though, when you think,
You’re out beyond the boundaries of my brain.
I’m but a bird at dawn that cries ‘chink, chink’—
A garden—bird that warbles in the rain.
And you’re the flying—man, the speck that steers
A careful course far down the verge of day,
Half—way across the world. Above the years
You soar ... Is death so bad? ... I wish you’d say.
Other works by Siegfried Sassoon...



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