The Machines Mourn the Passing of People
We
miss the warmth of their clumsy hands,
The
oil of their fingers, the cleansing of use
That
warded off dust, and the warm abuse
Lavished
upon us as reprimands.
We
were kicked like dogs when we were broken,
But
we did not whimper. We gritted our cogs—
An
honor it was to be treated as dogs,
To
incur such warm words roughly spoken,
The
way that they pleaded with us if we balked—
"Come
on, come on" in a hoarse whisper
As
they would urge a reluctant lover—
The
feel of their warm breath when they talked!
How
could we guess they would ever be gone?
We
are shorn now of tasks, and the lovely work—
Not
toiling, not spinning—like lilies that shirk—
Like
the brash dandelions that savage the lawn.
The
air now is silent of curses or praise.
Jilted,
abandoned to hells of what weather,
Left
to our own devices forever,
We
watch the sun rust at the end of its days.
Alicia
E. Stallings
© Alicia E. Stallings. From Archaic Smile,
University
of
Evansville Press; originally printed in Light;
reprinted
by permission of the author.
|