Glasser, Jane Ellen

United States, (b. 1944)

Smithfield Workers’ Testimonial

  1. Shoulder to shoulder in a mechanical line,
  2. we butcher 1,100 pigs an hour into cuts:
  3. loin, chops, ribs, belly, for your dinner.
  4.  
  5. When the governor of Missouri declared
  6. a state of emergency, our lines shrunk:
  7. 8 became 10 became 20 workers
  8.  
  9. sent home sick. When the company closed
  10. plants in 3 other cities, we worried:
  11. Should we stay home? But in Milan,
  12.  
  13. a small town of few jobs, losing even
  14. a day’s wages robs food from our tables.
  15. Until they tear, we wear the same gloves,
  16.  
  17. the same masks. With 15 minutes for break
  18. and 30 for lunch, who among us has time
  19. to wash hands? The plant advertised
  20.  
  21. a “responsibility bonus” of $500.00
  22. for not missing a shift April 1–May 1,
  23. a sum that would not even cover a funeral.
  24.  
  25. Now we are told if we stay home
  26. to keep ourselves and our families safe,
  27. we will be fired. We must work to make
  28.  
  29. a living, but no job is worth a life.

 Jane Ellen Glasser. Indolent Books Online. 06/19/2020 in “What Rough Beast” poem-a-day series. https://www.indolentbooks.com/

About the Poet:

Jane Ellen Glasser, United States, (b. 1944), is a poet, educator, reviewer and editor. Her poetry has appeared in numerous journals, such as The Hudson Review, The Southern Review, The Virginia Quarterly Review, and The Georgia Review, Hayden’s Ferry Review, Poetry Northwest and others. In the past Glasser reviewed poetry books for The Virginian-Pilot, edited poetry for the The Ghent Quarterly and Lady Jane’s Miscellany, and co-founded the nonprofit arts organization and journal New Virginia Review.

She has given presentations and conducted workshops for the International Society of Poetry, Writing Project at College of William & Mary, Tidewater Writing Project at Old Dominion University, and the Florida’s First Coast Writer’s Festival. For several years she served as poet-in-the-schools and visiting poet throughout Virginia before assuming a sixteen-year position as English and creative writing teacher at Norview High School in Norfolk, Virginia.

Glasser has presented readings and workshops for audiences as diverse as students in the Poet-in-the Schools Program, inmates at the Broward Detention Center, and participants in national poetry conferences. Glasser is a member of The Poetry Society of Virginia and The Fort Lauderdale Writers’ Group. [DES-06/22]

 • Biographies here are short. Yet all the poets presented have fascinating lives. And they have created a bountiful trough of treasures beyond these works. Please root on about those you enjoy! I hope you find something informative, meaningful or that provokes your further contemplation.

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