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<h4>>THE WORKHOUSE CLOCK.</h4>
<h5>AN ALLEGORY.</h5>
There's a murmur in the air,<br/>
And noise in every street—<br/>
The murmur of many tongues,<br/>
The noise of numerous feet—<br/>
While round the Workhouse door<br/>
The Laboring Classes flock,<br/>
For why? the Overseer of the Poor<br/>
Is setting the Workhouse Clock.<br/><br/>
Who does not hear the tramp<br/>
Of thousands speeding along<br/>
Of either sex and various stamp,<br/>
Sickly, cripple, or strong,<br/>
Walking, limping, creeping<br/>
From court and alley, and lane,<br/>
But all in one direction sweeping<br/>
Like rivers that seek the main?<br/><br/>
Who does not see them sally<br/>
From mill, and garret, and room,<br/>
In lane, and court and alley,<br/>
From homes in poverty's lowest valley,<br/>
Furnished with shuttle and loom—<br/>
Poor slaves of Civilization's galley—<br/>
And in the road and footways rally,<br/>
As if for the Day of Doom?<br/>
Some, of hardly human form,<br/>
Stunted, crooked, and crippled by toil;<br/>
Dingy with smoke and dust and oil,<br/>
And smirch'd besides with vicious soil,<br/>
Clustering, mustering, all in a swarm.<br/><br/>
Father, mother, and careful child,<br/>
Looking as if it had never smiled—<br/>
The Sempstress, lean, and weary, and wan,<br/>
With only the ghosts of garments on—<br/><br/>
The Weaver, her sallow neighbor,<br/>
The grim and sooty Artisan;<br/>
Every soul—child, woman, or man,<br/>
Who lives—or dies—by labor.<br/><br/>
Stirr'd by an overwhelming zeal,<br/>
And social impulse, a terrible throng!<br/>
Leaving shuttle, and needle, and wheel,<br/>
Furnace, and grindstone, spindle, and reel,<br/>
Thread, and yarn, and iron, and steel—<br/>
Yea, rest and the yet untasted meal—<br/>
Gushing, rushing, crushing along,<br/>
A very torrent of Man!<br/>
Urged by the sighs of sorrow and wrong,<br/>
Grown at last to a hurricane strong,<br/>
Stop its course who can!<br/>
Stop who can its onward course<br/>
And irresistible moral force;<br/>
O vain and idle dream!<br/>
For surely as men are all akin,<br/>
Whether of fair or sable skin,<br/>
According to Nature's scheme,<br/>
That Human Movement contains within<br/>
A Blood-Power stronger than Steam.<br/><br/>
Onward, onward, with hasty feet,<br/>
They swarm—and westward still—<br/>
Masses born to drink and eat,<br/>
But starving amidst Whitechapel's meat,<br/>
And famishing down Cornhill!<br/>
Through the Poultry—but still unfed—<br/>
Christian Charity, hang your head!<br/>
Hungry—passing the Street of Bread;<br/>
Thirsty—the street of Milk;<br/>
Ragged—beside the Ludgate Mart,<br/>
So gorgeous, through Mechanic-Art,<br/>
With cotton, and wool, and silk!<br/><br/>
At last, before that door<br/>
That bears so many a knock<br/>
Ere ever it opens to Sick or Poor,<br/>
Like sheep they huddle and flock—<br/>
And would that all the Good and Wise<br/>
Could see the Million of hollow eyes,<br/>
With a gleam deriv'd from Hope and the skies,<br/>
Upturn'd to the Workhouse Clock!<br/><br/>
Oh that the Parish Powers,<br/>
Who regulate Labor's hours,<br/>
The daily amount of human trial,<br/>
Weariness, pain, and self-denial,<br/>
Would turn from the artificial dial<br/>
That striketh ten or eleven,<br/>
And go, for once, by that older one<br/>
That stands in the light of Nature's sun,<br/>
And takes its time from Heaven!<br/>
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