An Evensong at Rugby School Chapel

An Evensong at Rugby School Chapel

Modern poetry  modern verse  contemporary poetry  contemporary verse modern poem contemporary poem

The service is devoted to Saint John

The Baptist.  Then when prayer comes, “Lord, now let,”

I think of peace and one plain tomb upon

Crosses on the Greek island of Skyros marking the grave of the English poet, Rupert Brooke (1887-1915), where he was buried having died at sea, having contracted septicaemia from an infected mosquito bite. He had joined the Royal Naval Division. The Sketch magazine, which published this photograph quoted his most famous, and as it turned out, prescient, lines, ‘If I should die, think only this of me. That there’s some corner of a foreign field. That is for ever England.’ Date: 1918

An island . . . and the boys he loved to pet,

The ones he slicked, those long before a girl.

He licked the soft breasts, too, but after he

Had touched the nubby nipples with no curl

Upon them at his school.  He sensed their plea

That felt so much like prayer that he must kiss

It into holiness as sacred as

A relic treasured in a whispered hiss,

More cherished than that Christian razzmatazz.

..That corner of an English schoolboy’s chest

….Was Rupert’s field of gold forever best.

Phillip Whidden