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 Carl 
  Sandburg  
  (Êàðë Ñàíäáåðã, 1878 - 1967)
  
 
American Poet and Biographer, winner of the Poetry Society Prize in 1919, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, 1951
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GRASS 
  ÒÐÀÂÀ 
Pile the bodies high at Austerlitz and Waterloo. 
  Shovel them under and let me work - 
  I am the grass; I cover all. 
  And pile them high at Getysburg 
  And pile them high at Ypres and Verdun, 
  Shovel them under and let me work 
  Two years, ten years, and passengers ask the conductor:
  “What place is this? Where are we now?”
  I am the grass. Let me work. 
MUCKERS
  ÍÀÂÎÇ 
 Twenty men stand watching the muckers. 
  Stabbing the sides of he ditch 
  Where clay gleam yellow, 
  Driving the blades of their shovels 
  Deeperand deeper for the new gas mains, 
  Wipping sweat off their faces 
  With red bandanas. 
  The muckers work on ... pausing ... to pull
  Their boots out of suckholes where they slosh.
  Of twenty looking on
  Ten murmur, “O, it’s a hell of a job,” 
  Ten others, “Jesus, I wish I had the job...”
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© 2001 Elena and Yakov Feldman