The Ghetto and Other Poems by Lola Ridge
page 7 of 75 (09%)
page 7 of 75 (09%)
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She--fiery static atom,
Held in place by the fierce pressure all about-- Speeds up the driven wheels And biting steel--that twice Has nipped her to the bone. Nights, she reads Those books that have most unset thought, New-poured and malleable, To which her thought Leaps fusing at white heat, Or spits her fire out in some dim manger of a hall, Or at a protest meeting on the Square, Her lit eyes kindling the mob... Or dances madly at a festival. Each dawn finds her a little whiter, Though up and keyed to the long day, Alert, yet weary... like a bird That all night long has beat about a light. The Gentile lover, that she charms and shrews, Is one more pebble in the pack For Sadie's mother, Who greets him with her narrowed eyes That hold some welcome back. "What's to be done?" she'll say, "When Sadie wants she takes... Better than Bennie with his Christian woman... A man is not so like, If they should fight, |
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