Back to Poem
Poem

The Lamp of Mutual Aid

โœ’๏ธ Joshua Edwards
Many nights while walking home after work, from downtown to an apartment below a market, Iโ€™d think of Alfred Espinas: โ€œWe do not get together to die, but to live and to improve life.โ€ Sudden changes of weather and contagious diseases nearly broke the spirits of many friends that winter, but charmingly we made habits of dancing and sharing meals in our cramped rooms. Our landlords were thieves and our bosses were pessimists, yet we dreamed of a new phase of civilization, one of kindness and goodwill. โ€œWe need communes,โ€ Oscar exclaimed. Silvia argued, โ€œBut islands are corpses, letโ€™s think instead of syndicates.โ€ Mondays weโ€™d return to dirty dishes, copy machines, and dull knives, and we spent the next three centuries doing what we were paid to do.
๐Ÿง  0
โค๏ธ 0
๐Ÿ”ฅ 0
๐Ÿงฉ 0
๐Ÿ•ณ๏ธ 0
Loading comments...