Analysis of The Ghetto



Cool, inaccessible air
Is floating in velvety blackness shot with steel-blue lights,
But no breath stirs the heat
Leaning its ponderous bulk upon the Ghetto
And most on Hester street…

The heat…
Nosing in the body's overflow,
Like a beast pressing its great steaming belly close,
Covering all avenues of air…

The heat in Hester street,
Heaped like a dray
With the garbage of the world.

Bodies dangle from the fire escapes
Or sprawl over the stoops…
Upturned faces glimmer pallidly -
Herring-yellow faces, spotted as with a mold,
And moist faces of girls
Like dank white lilies,
And infants' faces with open parched mouths that suck at the air
as at empty teats.

Young women pass in groups,
Converging to the forums and meeting halls,
Surging indomitable, slow
Through the gross underbrush of heat.
Their heads are uncovered to the stars,
And they call to the young men and to one another
With a free camaraderie.
Only their eyes are ancient and alone…

The street crawls undulant,
Like a river addled
With its hot tide of flesh
That ever thickens.
Heavy surges of flesh
Break over the pavements,
Clavering like a surf -
Flesh of this abiding
Brood of those ancient mothers who saw the dawn break over Egypt…
And turned their cakes upon the dry hot stones
And went on
Till the gold of the Egyptians fell down off their arms…
Fasting and athirst…
And yet on…

Did they vision - with those eyes darkly clear,
That looked the sun in the face and were not blinded -
Across the centuries
The march of their enduring flesh?
Did they hear -
Under the molten silence
Of the desert like a stopped wheel -
(And the scorpions tick-ticking on the sand…
The infinite procession of those feet?

I room at Sodos' - in the little green room that was Bennie's -
With Sadie
And her old father and her mother,
Who is not so old and wears her own hair.

Old Sodos no longer makes saddles.
He has forgotten how.
He has forgotten most things - even Bennie who stays away
and sends wine on holidays -
And he does not like Sadie's mother
Who hides God's candles,
Nor Sadie
Whose young pagan breath puts out the light -
That should burn always,
Like Aaron's before the Lord.

Time spins like a crazy dial in his brain,
And night by night
I see the love-gesture of his arm
In its green-greasy coat-sleeve
Circling the Book,
And the candles gleaming starkly
On the blotched-paper whiteness of his face,
Like a miswritten psalm…
Night by night
I hear his lifted praise,
Like a broken whinnying
Before the Lord's shut gate.

Sadie dresses in black.
She has black-wet hair full of cold lights
And a fine-drawn face, too white.
All day the power machines
Drone in her ears…
All day the fine dust flies
Till throats are parched and itch
And the heat - like a kept corpse -
Fouls to the last corner.

Then - when needles move more slowly on the cloth
And sweaty fingers slacken
And hair falls in damp wisps over the eyes -
Sped by some power within,
Sadie quivers like a rod…
A thin black piston flying,
One with her machine.

She - who stabs the piece-work with her bitter eye
And bids the girls: 'Slow down -
You'll have him cutting us again!'
She - fiery static atom,
Held in place by the fierce pressure all about -
Speeds up the driven wheels
And biting steel - that twice
Has nipped her to the bone.

Nights, she reads
Those books that have most unset thought,
New-poured and malleable,
To which her thought
Leaps fusing at white heat,
Or spits her fire out in some dim manger of a hall,
Or at a protest meeting on the Square,
Her lit eyes kindling the mob…
Or dances madly at a festival.
Each dawn finds her a little whiter,
Though up and keyed to the long day,
Alert, yet weary… like a bird
That all night long has beat about a light.

The Gentile lover, that she charms and shrews,
Is one more pebble in the pack
For Sadie's mother,
Who greets him with her narrowed eyes
That hold some welcome back.
'What's to be done?' she'll say,
'When Sadie wants she takes…
Better than Bennie with his Christian woman…
A man is not so like,
If they should fight,
To call her Jew…'

Yet when she lies in bed
And the soft babble of their talk comes to her
And the silences…
I know she never sleeps
Till the keen draught blowing up the empty hall
Edges through her transom


Scheme ABCDC CDXA CEX XFGXXHAX FXDCXIJK CXLXLXXMXXNXCN XXHLXXGXC BJIA OXEPIOJQPX XQXXXGXXQPMX RBQXXSXXI XTSXXMX XXXUXXXK XVGVCGAXGIEXQ BRISREXTXQX XIXXGU
Poetic Form
Metre 101001 11001001011111 111101 101100101010 011101 01 10001010 101101110101 10011011 010101 1101 1010101 1010101001 111001 110101 101010101101 011011 11110 010101101111101 11101 110101 01010100101 10010001 1011011 111010101 0111011011010 1010100 1011110001 0111 101010 111111 11010 101011 110010 1101 111010 1111010110111010 0111010111 011 1011001011111 1001 011 1110111101 110100100110 010100 01110101 111 1001010 10101011 00100110101 0100010111 1111001011111 110 001100010 1111101011 11110110 110101 110101110101101 011110 011111010 11110 110 111011101 1111 1100101 11101010011 0111 110110111 0111011 10001 00101010 1011010111 1011 111 111101 10101 010111 101001 111111111 0011111 1101001 1001 110111 111101 0011011 110110 11101110101 0101010 0110111001 1111001 101101 0111010 11001 11101110101 010111 11110101 11001010 10110110101 110101 010111 110101 111 11111011 1101000 1101 110111 11010101110101 110110101 0111001 1101010100 111001010 11011011 01110101 1111110101 011011101 11110001 11010 11110101 111101 111111 110111 10110111010 011111 1111 1101 111101 00110111110 00100 111101 10111010101 101010
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 4,144
Words 787
Sentences 23
Stanzas 16
Stanza Lengths 5, 4, 3, 8, 8, 14, 9, 4, 10, 12, 9, 7, 8, 13, 11, 6
Lines Amount 131
Letters per line (avg) 25
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 207
Words per stanza (avg) 49
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:58 min read
107

Lola Ridge

Lola Ridge was an anarchist poet and an influential editor of avant-garde feminist and Marxist publications best remembered for her long poems and poetic sequences She along with other political poets of the early Modernist period has been coming under increasing critical scrutiny at the beginning of the twenty-first century more…

All Lola Ridge poems | Lola Ridge Books

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