POEM

Factory

by Charles Simic

The machines were gone, and so were those who worked them.   
A single high-backed chair stood like a throne
In all that empty space.
I was on the floor making myself comfortable
For a long night of little sleep and much thinking.

An empty birdcage hung from a steam pipe.   
In it I kept an apple and a small paring knife.
I placed newspapers all around me on the floor   
So I could jump at the slightest rustle.
It was like the scratching of a pen,
The silence of the night writing in its diary.

Of rats who came to pay me a visit   
I had the highest opinion.
They’d stand on two feet
As if about to make a polite request   
On a matter of great importance.

Many other strange things came to pass.   
Once a naked woman climbed on the chair   
To reach the apple in the cage.
I was on the floor watching her go on tiptoe,   
Her hand fluttering in the cage like a bird.

On other days, the sun peeked through dusty windowpanes   
To see what time it was. But there was no clock,   
Only the knife in the cage, glinting like a mirror,   
And the chair in the far corner
Where someone once sat facing the brick wall.

 Charles  Simic

Charles Simic, a native of Yugoslavia who immigrated to the United States during his teens, has . . . MORE »

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