Title: Flowers and Ashes
Date: 1915
Topics: poetry
Notes: Originally published in Mother Earth, Vol. X, no. 4, June 1915.
Source: Retrieved on March 20, 2012 from en.wikisource.orgThe swaying streetcar bulged with human freight, A gust of sand blew up the narrow street And caught it as it whirled with giddy gait. The souls within sighed wearily, the heat Was so intense it hurt their tired feet, Their tired eyes, and hands, and tired souls. It was the hour when the workers pause at last And seek those murky, fetid, loathsome holes They call their homes; if thus their lot be cast. Poor wrecks of lives! Poor ships with broken mast! A woman sat beside me and her face Was lined with care and sorrow, as if the years That she had lived and loved and hept her place Among the workers, had been a thing of tears; A tragic life of agonies—and fears. And in her hand she held some flowers, Old-fashioned flowers, like our grandames knew. Their fragrance was so sweet, I minded distant hours. I touched their dear, soft faces for I knw I’d think of other flowers wet with dew. We jogged along street after street and then The woman spoke, “For my man’s grave,” she said And then was silent. When I looked again On her pale cheek there burned a spot of red “For twenty years,” she mused, “my man’s been dead.” “Yes, I raise flowers for his grave. You see He loved the flowers and the soft green frass And it is lonely where he sleeps and he... Must miss me, want me, so I always pass The little plot at evening....But alas! Death comes so slow, with lagging steps...that pause... Before they reach me.” “Why,” I said, “It would seem That you could find another love...another cause... To strive for...Do you have no babes...or dream No dreams, nor see the future all agleam— With promise?” She clutched the flowers, her thin form Shook with emotion. “Because I had two When he fell off the painter’s Scaffold...and was torn... Right out of life... I knew not what to do... I worked, I begged, I stole. And God, he knew, I was so faint and sick in that foul air,... My babes were hungry and my life was dust. ...I gave my body for them...They were fair And young—with trustful eyes—I felt I must Do all things for them,...even those of lust. The law came down upon me with a din,... It took them both away—my babes—it said... I was a thing of shame and marked with sin And babes were pure in heart and must be led In whiter ways than mine,...who was not wed! And I grow flowers in a little box High in a window in a dark old street... Where children never come, to smile at phlox Or marigold or primrose....There I meet Only the wretched...still my heart does beat— For Death must very old have grown, he does not Knock upon my battered door or lurk Beside my flowers.” We rode on.—Thus have you wrought, Oh, gloating “men of God” who bow and smirk, ...Call you this white soul black?... Is this your holy work?