Heart Labor
When I work too hard and
then lie down,
even my sleep is sad and all worn out.
You want me to name
the specific sorrows?
They do not matter. You have your own.
Most of
the people in the world
go out to work, day after day,
with their voices
chained in their throats.
I am swimming a narrow, swift river.
Upstream,
the clouds have already darkened
and deep blue holes I cannot see
churn up
under the smooth flat rocks.
The Greeks have a word,
paropono,
for the complaint without answer,
for how the heart
labors, while
all the time our faces appear calm
enough to float through
in the moonlight.
~ Maggie Anderson
~
(Windfall: New and Selected
Poems)
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