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The Daily Poem

Siegfried Sassoon's "Attack"

The Daily Poem

Goldberry Studios

Education For Kids, Arts, Kids & Family

4.6729 Ratings

🗓️ 19 March 2025

⏱️ 6 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Siegfried Sassoon was born on 8 September 1886 in Kent. His father was part of a Jewish merchant family, originally from Iran and India, and his mother part of the artistic Thorneycroft family. Sassoon studied at Cambridge University but left without a degree. He then lived the life of a country gentleman, hunting and playing cricket while also publishing small volumes of poetry.

In May 1915, Sassoon was commissioned into the Royal Welsh Fusiliers and went to France. He impressed many with his bravery in the front line and was given the nickname 'Mad Jack' for his near-suicidal exploits. He was decorated twice. His brother Hamo was killed in November 1915 at Gallipoli.

In the summer of 1916, Sassoon was sent to England to recover from fever. He went back to the front, but was wounded in April 1917 and returned home. Meetings with several prominent pacifists, including Bertrand Russell, had reinforced his growing disillusionment with the war and in June 1917 he wrote a letter that was published in the Times in which he said that the war was being deliberately and unnecessarily prolonged by the government. As a decorated war hero and published poet, this caused public outrage. It was only his friend and fellow poet, Robert Graves, who prevented him from being court-martialled by convincing the authorities that Sassoon had shell-shock. He was sent to Craiglockhart War Hospital in Edinburgh for treatment. Here he met, and greatly influenced, Wilfred Owen. Both men returned to the front where Owen was killed in 1918. Sassoon was posted to Palestine and then returned to France, where he was again wounded, spending the remainder of the war in England. Many of his war poems were published in 'The Old Huntsman' (1917) and 'Counter-Attack' (1918).

After the war Sassoon spent a brief period as literary editor of the Daily Herald before going to the United States, travelling the length and breadth of the country on a speaking tour. He then started writing the near-autobiographical novel 'Memoirs of a Fox-hunting Man' (1928). It was an immediate success, and was followed by others including 'Memoirs of an Infantry Officer' (1930) and 'Sherston's Progress' (1936). Sassoon had a number of homosexual affairs but in 1933 surprised many of his friends by marrying Hester Gatty. They had a son, George, but the marriage broke down after World War Two.

He continued to write both prose and poetry. In 1957, he was received into the Catholic church. He died on 1 September 1967.

-bio via BBC



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Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome back to The Daily Poem, a podcast from Goldberry Studios.

0:08.4

I'm Sean Johnson, and today is Wednesday, March 19th, 2025.

0:14.0

Today's poem is by British War poet Sigfried Sassoon, and it's called Attack.

0:20.5

I'll read it once, say a thing or two about it,

0:23.1

then read it again. Attack. At dawn, the ridge emerges massed and done in the wild purple

0:32.1

of the glowering sun, smoldering through spouts of drifting smoke that shroud the menacing scarred slope. And one by one,

0:41.9

tanks creep and topple forward to the wire. The barrage roars and lifts, then clumsily bowed,

0:48.9

with bombs and guns and shovels and battle gear, men jostle and climb to meet the bristling fire. Lines of gray,

0:57.9

muttering faces, masked with fear, they leave their trenches going over the top, while time

1:03.8

ticks blank and busy on their wrists, and hope with furtive eyes and grappling fists flounders in mud.

1:13.3

Oh, J-Su, make it stop.

1:20.5

Sassoon was a decorated soldier fighting for Britain in World War I,

1:26.8

but became increasingly angry about and disillusioned

1:32.8

by the war effort and ended up writing a strongly worded letter of protests claiming, among other

1:39.3

things, that he believed the war was being continued and carried on, at least in England, by men who had, as he

1:47.0

said, the power to end it. This letter found its way into the hands of a minister of parliament and was

1:52.4

even read in the House of Commons, at which point Sassouin thought that he was going to face some

1:57.6

trouble for it, even potentially court-martial,

2:02.2

but some influential public figures, including Bertrand Russell, came to his defense

2:08.3

and he escaped the small controversy unscathed.

2:13.2

Throughout his time of service, he was writing poetry, and after the war, he published a collection entitled Counterattack and other poems,

2:22.2

which contained many verses like today's critical of the war and painting a frank but bleak picture of the human experience in that war.

...

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