Spencer Heath's
Series
Spencer Heath Archive
Item 587
Poem not originally by Heath, but reworked by him and two last stanzas added
THE UNDERTAKER AND THE WORM
Scrawny and thin my dead come in
But looks are soon forgotten;
Each hollow cheek and shrunken beak
I fill with bits of cotton.
I set their hair a-waving fair
And pull their eyelids down
Then ply my art to every part
Removing scowl and frown.
But death is brief and so is grief;
The grave makes no disgrace,
And by my care each dead shall wear
A smile upon his face.
But when the worm has done his turn
Both outside and within
That ersatz smile he will beguile
Into a horrid grin.
He takes for pay all flesh away,
Each lineament and line;
His work will stay till judgment day,
A cleaner job than mine.
/The original follows.
Title and authorship unknown./
Scrawny and thin my dead come in
But looks are soon forgotten
I fill the hollows of their cheeks
with little bits of cotton.
I set their hair awaving fair
And pull their eyelids down
Then like a sculptor ply my art
Removing scowl and frown.
But death is brief and so is grief
The tomb is no disgrace
And every man I bury
Wears a smile upon his face.
Metadata
Title | Subject - 587 - The Undertaker And The Worm |
Collection Name | Spencer Heath Archive |
Series | Subject |
Box number | 5:467-640 |
Document number | 587 |
Date / Year | |
Authors / Creators / Correspondents | |
Description | Poem not originally by Heath, but reworked by him and two last stanzas added |
Keywords | Poem Undertaker |