NIGHT SHIFT AT THE FRUIT CANNERY
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The thin neon light spills on the hands in the tubs,
the pale halves of the pears that must be dipped in salt
water to
keep from turning brown,
the endless procession of cans that moves past the women
now and at midnight and dawn and on and on
even in sleep, even in dream.
Fingers turn wrinkled, turn pale like the pears,
take on a life of their own as they nestle the slippery fruit
spoonfashion in the can,
barely stopping to push the straggling hair back under the
scarf.
No time to talk, no time to look up,
nothing to look up at.
Time has stopped, there is no yesterday, no tomorrow, no
moment
but now, no place but here,
this slave ship hurtling through eons of empty space.
And at the whistle which rends the rumble and clatter and
din that
taught their ears not to hear,
the women stumble outside like children woken too early for
school,
stretching stiff limbs and creaking necks, testing a voice
rusty from
lack of use.
Still dazzled-eyed, they look up and see
stars in their multitudes blazing over their heads.
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