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THE LOCOMOTIVE.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

THE LOCOMOTIVE.

They call me a mass of iron and brass; they say that a spirit I lack;
That my real soul is the grimy man in the wooden pen on my back;
That the flame I devour and the steam I breathe are from wood and from water alone,
And I have no mind but what men bestow, those beings of flesh and bone.
Let them say if they will whatever they will, though had they observed me when
I was scurrying over the iron rails, the wonder and pride of men—
Had they watched as they might, they had seen a will, as I sped on my iron path,
And a purpose of terror when once I awoke, and aroused to a terrible wrath.
I have borne their yoke in a patient way for many a weary hour—
The pity that filled my massive breast forbade me to use my power;

535

But I am not always a passive thing, nor forever with joy I scream,
As I rumble and clatter and speed me along, with my nostrils breathing steam.
For when they believe me their thrall and drudge, my patience a moment fails,
And then, with a thousand wretches behind, I leap the limiting rails,
Over the lofty embankment spring, and plunge to the depths below,
While the careless laugh of the people I drag is changed to a shriek of woe.
And so to-night on the stroke of twelve with my burning eye I peer
Into the darkness that gathers before, and I startle the engineer;
For I whirl from side to side, and I pant, and I struggle and scream with delight—
Down brakes! there's a tree on the track ahead, and Death rides aboard to-night.
Some are asleep in their seats, and dream; and others, in accents gay,
Are telling light stories of what they have seen, or discussing the news of the day;
And some are thinking of things long past; and others again there be
Who are longing to meet their children and wives in the homes they never may see.
A jar and a crash! I yell as I leap, and feel my stout ribs bend,
While the cars they crush like houses of card, and their strong beams splinter and rend;

536

And here is a head, and there is a limb; and mark, when the lights are brought,
The mangled mass that once was alive, and walked and talked and thought.
You say that I am an inanimate thing; that I neither know nor feel;
That merely steam with an iron bar is moving my driving-wheel.
Why, I planned this thing, and brooded alone, and thought of it day by day,
And waited my chance, and bided my time, as I sped on my tiresome way.
You builded a monster of iron and brass, and fed it with water and flame,
And you thought it a creature your finger-touch, whenever you would, could tame;
Had you known its temper, or studied its mood, you never had felt its might,
And the mangled dead on the cold earth spread were living and merry to-night.