Songs of Labor and Other Poems by Morris Rosenfeld
page 3 of 68 (04%)
page 3 of 68 (04%)
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In the Factory Oh, here in the shop the machines roar so wildly, That oft, unaware that I am, or have been, I sink and am lost in the terrible tumult; And void is my soul... I am but a machine. I work and I work and I work, never ceasing; Create and create things from morning till e'en; For what?--and for whom--Oh, I know not! Oh, ask not! Who ever has heard of a conscious machine? No, here is no feeling, no thought and no reason; This life-crushing labor has ever supprest The noblest and finest, the truest and richest, The deepest, the highest and humanly best. The seconds, the minutes, they pass out forever, They vanish, swift fleeting like straws in a gale. I drive the wheel madly as tho' to o'ertake them,-- Give chase without wisdom, or wit, or avail. The clock in the workshop,--it rests not a moment; It points on, and ticks on: Eternity--Time; And once someone told me the clock had a meaning,-- Its pointing and ticking had reason and rhyme. And this too he told me,--or had I been dreaming,-- The clock wakened life in one, forces unseen, And something besides;... I forget what; Oh, ask not! |
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