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LABOR POEM OF THE WEEK: BARKING A FEW LINES

Harold Phillips | Published on 6/27/2026

I am starting not to cringe

when the supervisor

walks toward my machine

I am starting

to stand up tall again without feeling

like I'll be beaten down

a dog's

ears stand up when its spirit is unbroken

6 months gone from that sweatshop in downtown L.A.

beaten down

by an owner and a supervisor and I can take a deep breath

and think again

at this new job

like I am a human being who has a right

to take a deep breath

and think

stand around and stroke his beard for a minute

because he feels like it

I cannot stick up my ears like a dog

so this poem will have to do

sticking up proudly

at that owner and that supervisor who tried

to break me

see

I am stroking my beard

taking a deep breath

thinking of a poem again at this new job

instead of desperately racing from

machine handle to machine handle

like I did in your sweatshop for 5 years

I lift this pen the way dogs lift their ears

bark

run around in circles a few times

leaping

for joy

Fred Voss; an American poet and novelist who wrote about the lives of American machinists working in factories for over forty years.


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