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"Memorial Tablet (Great War)" is a poem by Siegfried Sassoon, written in October 1918 and first published in his 1919 collection Picture-Show. The original manuscript is held by Cambridge University Library. Sassoon had by this time been invalided out of the army and the war had only a month to run.
The poem is narrated in the first person by a dead soldier. The soldier, a man from a lower-class background used to obeying the orders of the local Squire, who "nagged and bullied" local men to go and fight for their country, describes the manner of his own death at the Battle of Passchendaele. The Squire stayed safe at home and did not go to war; there is an implication that he was fully aware of the danger. The poem goes on to describe the soldier's death when he slipped from the duckboards when a shell hit the trench and drowned in mud, a pointless death. The soldier finds that his name on a memorial is the only thing he has to show for his life, and feels that the Squire, looking on from his pew in the church, cannot imagine the suffering of the men he sent to the Front. Like many of Sassoon's poems, "Memorial Tablet" has a bitterly ironic punchline. After describing his own sordid death and the inadequacy of the memorial, the narrator asks: "What greater glory could a man desire?"
"Memorial Tablet" was used as the title of a CD released in 2003, containing readings by Sassoon and other war poets, and music by Edward Elgar.
Usage examples of "memorial tablet".
Glaring at the memorial tablet the scaly devils had set up, more than likely.
It provided support, because he had set his left cast-iron foot with its cast-iron sandal sole on the upper edge of a cast-iron memorial tablet with the informative inscription: Here stands Johannes Gutenberg.
So it had to be here somewhere, along with the rest of the parclose screen and the section of memorial tablet that read, -ernal, and Id better get busy if I was going to find them before dark.
Cyr (before it was destroyed during World War II) the memorial tablet to the dead of the Great War bore only a single entry for “.
Graves, each with its own memorial tablet, bore witness to the name and dates and virtues of the persons who lay buried there.
Whilst I was still thinking of that memorial tablet, I found myself in front of the Cathedral.
The marble memorial tablet for the dead of both wars: still quite a lot of room to spare.
You may be sure that if they can find the place they will sink a bronze memorial tablet immediately above the main faucet.
A very ordinary house, distinguished, however, with a memorial tablet, occupies the site.
She had been buried in a Lincolnshire church among her dead husband's family and under a memorial tablet recording Lord William Male's virtues.