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Work Gangs

Carl Sandburg on

Published in Poem Of The Day

Box cars run by a mile long.
And I wonder what they say to each other
When they stop a mile long on a sidetrack.
Maybe their chatter goes:
I came from Fargo with a load of wheat up to the danger line.
I came from Omaha with a load of shorthorns and they splintered my boards.
I came from Detroit heavy with a load of flivvers.
I carried apples from the Hood river last year and this year bunches of bananas from
Florida; they look for me with watermelons from Mississippi next year.

Hammers and shovels of work gangs sleep in shop corners
when the dark stars come on the sky and the night watchmen walk and look.

Then the hammer heads talk to the handles,
then the scoops of the shovels talk,
how the day's work nicked and trimmed them,
how they swung and lifted all day,
how the hands of the work gangs smelled of hope.
In the night of the dark stars
when the curve of the sky is a work gang handle,
in the night on the mile long sidetracks,
in the night where the hammers and shovels sleep in corners,
the night watchmen stuff their pipes with dreams-
and sometimes they doze and don't care for nothin',
and sometimes they search their heads for meanings, stories, stars.
The stuff of it runs like this:
A long way we come; a long way to go; long rests and long deep sniffs for our lungs on
the way.
Sleep is a belonging of all; even if all songs are old songs and the singing heart is snuffed
out like a switchman's lantern with the oil gone, even if we forget our names and
houses in the finish, the secret of sleep is left us, sleep belongs to all, sleep is the first
and last and best of all.

People singing; people with song mouths connecting with song hearts; people who must
sing or die; people whose song hearts break if there is no song mouth; these are my
people.



About this poem
"Work Gangs" was published in "Smoke and Steel" (Harcourt, Brace & Co., 1920).

About Carl Sandburg
Carl Sandburg was born in Galesburg, Ill., on Jan. 6, 1878. A member of the early 20th-century Chicago literary renaissance, his works include "Chicago Poems" (1916) and "Cornhuskers" (1918), for which he received a Pulitzer Prize. He died on July 22, 1967.

***
The Academy of American Poets is a nonprofit, mission-driven organization, whose aim is to make poetry available to a wider audience. Email The Academy at poem-a-day[at]poets.org.


This poem is in the public domain. Distributed by King Features Syndicate



 


 

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