Jump to content

Cornhuskers/Psalm of Those Who Go Forth Before Daylight

From Wikisource
Cornhuskers
by Carl Sandburg
Psalm of Those Who Go Forth Before Daylight
Listen to this text (help | file info or download)
144325Cornhuskers — Psalm of Those Who Go Forth Before DaylightCarl Sandburg

PSALM OF THOSE WHO GO FORTH BEFORE DAYLIGHT


The policeman buys shoes slow and careful; the teamster buys gloves slow and careful; they take care of their feet and hands; they live on their feet and hands.


The milkman never argues; he works alone and no one speaks to him; the city is asleep when he is on the job; he puts a bottle on six hundred porches and calls it a day's work; he climbs two hundred wooden stairways; two horses are company for him; he never argues.


The rolling-mill men and the sheet-steel men are brothers of cinders; they empty cinders out of their shoes after the day's work; they ask their wives to fix burnt holes in the knees of their trousers; their necks and ears are covered with a smut; they scour their necks and ears; they are brothers of cinders.