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A continuing selection of classic and contemporary poems.

Pen And Shears

Morris Rosenfeld

My tailor’s shears I scorned then;
  I strove for something higher:
To edit news—live by the pen—
  The pen that shall not tire!

The pen, that was my humble slave,
  Has now enslaved its master;
And fast as flows its Midas-wave,
  My rebel tears flow faster.

The world I clad once, tailor-hired,
  Whilst I in tatters quaked,
Today, you see me well attired,
  Who lets the world go naked.

What human soul, how’er oppressed,
  Can feel my chained soul’s yearning!
A monster woe lies in my breast,
  In voiceless anguish burning.

Oh, swing ajar the shop door, do!
  I’ll bear as ne’er I bore it.
My blood!… you sweatshop leeches, you!…
  Now less I’ll blame you for it.

I’ll stitch as ne’er in former years;
  I’ll drive the mad wheel faster;
Slave will I be but to the shears;
  The pen shall know its master!

Translated by Rose Pastor Stokes and Helena Frank

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From Songs of Labor and Other Poems
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