This is a poem that is pretty reflective of my feelings, intensely negative, about the industrial and post-industrial world we all inhabit. It has do with the dehumanizing tendency of the mechanization of manual work. One might also include the computerization of cerebral work. In my case, I work as a stone cutter, and have done for a good many years. The point of the poem is that the objects and spaces we choose to create, either individually or collectively as a society, are indicative of particular spiritual states; sad to say, they are frequently destructive ones. You could say that this is a vision of a world in opposition to Faerie, to enchantment and to beauty. The world from which I look for refuge.
OBJECTS ARE SPIRITUAL FORMS
Jesus! I hate these corpse-gray, moldy walls,
That bellowing air-compressor and the reek
Of ruptured stone! The bridge-saw spits and bawls
And shudders like a lunatic all week.
Cold slabs of stone lean by the ton in racks;
Dust in a fine mist clogs the stinking air.
A radio blares. A router coughs and hacks
Shaking this wall of noise I cannot bear.
And yet I bear it, dwelling on the germ
Which, multiplying, framed this roaring tomb;
'Til glimmers on my inward eye the form
That avarice assumes in matter's womb.
Now set the subtle tissues of you hand
Down lightly on the shell of this machine:
Indifference should burn you like a brand,
And cynicism cause your soul to keen.
- Tod Jones

