Classic and Contemporary Poetry
A LAY OF THE TAMBOUR FRAME, by JANET HAMILTON Poet's Biography First Line: Bending with straining eyes Last Line: She is ever the same. Alternate Author Name(s): Hamilton, Janet Thompson Subject(s): Labor & Laborers; Women's Rights; Work; Workers; Feminism | ||||||||
BENDING with straining eyes Over the tambour frame, Never a change in her weary routine Slave in all but the name. Tambour, ever tambour, Tambour the wreathing lines Of 'broidered silk, till beauty's robe In rainbow lustre shines. There, with colourless cheek; There, with her tangling hair; Still bending low o'er the rickety frame, Seek, ye will find her there. Tambour, ever tambour, With fingers cramped and chill; The panes are shattered, and cold the wind Blows over the eastern hill. Why quail, my sisters, why, As ye were abjects vile, When begging some haughty brother of earth "To give you leave to toil"? It is tambour you must, Naught else you have to do; Though paupers' dole be of higher amount Than pay oft earned by you. No union strikes for you; Unshielded and alone In the battle of lifea battle it is, Where virtue is oft o'erthrown. O working men! Oh, why Pass ye thus careless by, Nor give to the working woman's complaint One word of kind reply? Selfish, unfeeling men! Have ye not had your will? High pay, short hours; yet your cry, like the leech, Is, Give us, give us still. She who tambourstambours For fifteen hours a day Would have shoes on her feet, and dress for church, Had she a third of your pay. Sisters, cousins, and aunts Are they; yet, if not so, Say, are they not sisters by human ties, And sympathy's kindly flow? To them how dear the boon From brother's hand that came! It would warm the heart and brighten the eyes, While bending o'er the frame. Raise ye a fund to aid In times of deep distress; While man helps man, to their sisters in need Brothers can do no less. Still the tambourer bends Wearily o'er the frame. Patterns oft vary, for fashions will change She is ever the same. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE RIGHTS OF WOMAN by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD THE RIGHTS OF WOMAN by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD HEMATITE HEIRLOOM LIVES ON (MAYBE DECEMBER 1980) by ALICE NOTLEY ON THE BEACH by CLARIBEL ALEGRIA FEMINIST POEM NUMBER ONE by ELIZABETH ALEXANDER HYPOCRITE SWIFT by LOUISE BOGAN FOR A GODCHILD, REGINA, ON THE OCCASION OF HER FIRST LOVE by TOI DERRICOTTE HESTER'S SONG by TOI DERRICOTTE A BALLAD FOUNDED ON A REAL INCIDENT WHICH OCCURED IN HIGH LIFE by JANET HAMILTON |
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