UNDERTAKERS, hearse drivers, grave diggers, I speak to you as one not afraid of your business. You handle dust going to a long country, You know the secret behind your job is the same whether you lower the coffin with modern, automatic machinery, well-oiled and noiseless, or whether the body is laid in by naked hands and then covered by the shovels. Your day's work is done with laughter many days of the year, And you earn a living by those who say good-by today in thin whispers. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE BALLAD OF LOVELY LADYES OF LONG AGOE by FRANCOIS VILLON OUR COUNTRY by JULIA WARD HOWE THE WAITER AND THE ALLIGATOR by G. W. A. SOURCE by KENNETH SLADE ALLING LINES WRITTEN BY A DEATH-BED by MATTHEW ARNOLD AUTUMN SOLILOQUY by ELSIE DINWIDDIE BARTLETT |