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#9 |
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Practically Lives Here
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by X. J. Kennedy Sundays we'd stroll to the railroad track, My white-collared father and I, Where he'd gaze after freight trains billowing past And deliver himself of a sigh— "If I still worked for the railroad, I'd retire with a pass. I could ride To any place in the country, And the country, they say, is wide." Yet for thirty years my father With fountain pen wielded power At the boiler factory in Dover, Keeping track of each man-hour: He would total up columns of numbers In a flash with astonishing skill And never a man's pay envelope Fell short of a dollar bill. He would hike to the bank every Thursday To fetch payroll cash in a sack, The insurance company insisting That a blue steel pistol he pack. How the neighbors would taunt and tease him— "Hey, Joe, would you pull your gun And shoot it out with that stickup man?"— "No, I'd throw him the money and run." He continued to add up numbers In his head till there came on the scene A formidable robot rival, The Burroughs adding machine. My father saw that his number Would be up soon. As he feared, Anybody could tug on a handle And an accurate total appeared. They broke the news to him gently, They professed their profound regret And presented him, not with a pension But a pen-and-pencil set. For a time he displayed it proudly Till the pencil had to be tossed, When it wouldn't quite twist as it used to And the cap of the pen got lost. For more than eight thousand mornings He had walked to his job past a sign Where the Women's Christian Temperance Union had posted a line Ill fitting the situation Of the obsolescently skilled: Life is no goblet to be drained But a measure to be filled. |
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