The Bad Old Days
The summer of nineteen eighteen   
 I read The Jungle and The
 Research Magnificent. That fall   
 My father died and my aunt   
 Took me to Chicago to live.   
 The first thing I did was to take   
 A streetcar to the stockyards.   
 In the winter afternoon,   
 Gritty and fetid, I walked
 Through the filthy snow, through the   
 Squalid streets, looking shyly   
 Into the people’s faces,
 Those who were home in the daytime.   
 Debauched and exhausted faces,   
 Starved and looted brains, faces   
 Like the faces in the senile   
 And insane wards of charity   
 Hospitals. Predatory
 Faces of little children.
 Then as the soiled twilight darkened,   
 Under the green gas lamps, and the   
 Sputtering purple arc lamps,   
 The faces of the men coming
 Home from work, some still alive with   
 The last pulse of hope or courage,   
 Some sly and bitter, some smart and   
 Silly, most of them already   
 Broken and empty, no life,   
 Only blinding tiredness, worse   
 Than any tired animal.   
 The sour smells of a thousand   
 Suppers of fried potatoes and   
 Fried cabbage bled into the street.   
 I was giddy and sick, and out   
 Of my misery I felt rising   
 A terrible anger and out
 Of the anger, an absolute vow.   
 Today the evil is clean
 And prosperous, but it is   
 Everywhere, you don’t have to   
 Take a streetcar to find it,
 And it is the same evil.
 And the misery, and the
 Anger, and the vow are the same.
Copyright Credit: Kenneth Rexroth, “The Bad Old Days” from The Collected Shorter Poems. Copyright © 1966 by Kenneth Rexroth. Reprinted with the permission of New Directions Publishing Corporation, www.wwnorton.com/nd/welcome.htm.
Source: The Collected Shorter Poems (1966)


