Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Dream by Siegfried Loraine Sassoon
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The Dream

    By Siegfried Loraine Sassoon



    I

    Moonlight and dew-drenched blossom, and the scent
    Of summer gardens; these can bring you all
    Those dreams that in the starlit silence fall:
    Sweet songs are full of odours.
        While I went
    Last night in drizzling dusk along a lane,
    I passed a squalid farm; from byre and midden
    Came the rank smell that brought me once again
    A dream of war that in the past was hidden.

    II

    Up a disconsolate straggling village street
    I saw the tired troops trudge: I heard their feet.
    The cheery Q.M.S. was there to meet
    And guide our Company in ...
        I watched them stumble
    Into some crazy hovel, too beat to grumble;
    Saw them file inward, slipping from their backs
    Rifles, equipment, packs.
    On filthy straw they sit in the gloom, each face
    Bowed to patched, sodden boots they must unlace,
    While the wind chills their sweat through chinks and cracks.

    III

    I'm looking at their blistered feet; young Jones
    Stares up at me, mud-splashed and white and jaded;
    Out of his eyes the morning light has faded.
    Old soldiers with three winters in their bones
    Puff their damp Woodbines, whistle, stretch their toes:
    They can still grin at me, for each of 'em knows
    That I'm as tired as they are ...
            Can they guess
    The secret burden that is always mine? -
    Pride in their courage; pity for their distress;
    And burning bitterness
    That I must take them to the accursèd Line.

    IV

    I cannot hear their voices, but I see
    Dim candles in the barn: they gulp their tea,
    And soon they'll sleep like logs. Ten miles away
    The battle winks and thuds in blundering strife.
    And I must lead them nearer, day by day,
    To the foul beast of war that bludgeons life.



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