Twenty men stand watching the muckers. Stabbing the sides of the ditch Where clay gleams yellow, Driving the blades of their shovels Deeper and deeper for the new gas mains, Wiping sweat off their faces With red bandanas.
The muckers work on . . . pausing . . . to pull Their boots out of suckholes where they slosh.
Of the twenty looking on Ten murmur, "O, it's a hell of a job," Ten others, "Jesus, I wish I had the job."
--Carl Sandburg -- Complete Poems
Two groups of ten and while they stand next to each other, they occupy different worlds, or so it seems to Carl Sandburg. It reminds me of that saying attributed to a Native American: Condemn no one until you have walked a mile in that person's shoes. As I look back, I see too many times when I forgot this.
This is a very physical poem: ditch, clay, stabbing, blades, shovels, sweat, boots in suckholes, slosh, red bandanas. . ..
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