Skip to main content

The Hard Work of Hope: Hard Work

The Hard Work of Hope
Hard Work
  • Show the following:

    Annotations
    Resources
  • Adjust appearance:

    Font
    Font style
    Color Scheme
    Light
    Dark
    Annotation contrast
    Low
    High
    Margins
  • Search within:
    • Notifications
    • Privacy
  • Project HomeThe Hard Work of Hope
  • Projects
  • Learn more about Manifold

Notes

table of contents
  1. List of Illustrations
  2. “Hard Work”
  3. Author’s Note
  4. Preface
  5. 1. Getting on the Bus
  6. 2. A New Left and the Start of the Student Movement
  7. 3. Creating Room for Dissent
  8. 4. The Not-So-Radical Personal Life of a Sixties Radical
  9. 5. Taking it to a New Level: 1966–67
  10. 6. Sitting In and Armies of the Night
  11. 7. 1968
  12. 8. Shutting Down Harvard
  13. 9. Strange Days: 1969–70
  14. 10. Days of Rage
  15. 11. A March in Lowell
  16. 12. Dorchester and The People First
  17. 13. How Does a War End?
  18. 14. To Be an Organizer
  19. 15. Massachusetts Fair Share
  20. 16. The End of My Long Sixties
  21. Epilogue: From the Vantage of Fifty Years
  22. Acknowledgments
  23. Notes
  24. Selected Bibliography
  25. Index

Hard Work

Kathleen Aguero

Hope springs eternal, but

I couldn’t imagine how

hope, before it gets to that bubbling place,

forces itself through miles of dirt packed hard,

then around, over, under rocks,

willing itself not to dry up in the desert

or to merge with the sewer of a city street,

waiting for frozen prairie to thaw,

resisting the warm and mindless absorption

of mud, moss, sand, swamp

until it finds the small trembling

where, welcome or not, it gathers the last of its strength

and breaks through to the surface

the way a laboring woman, stinking,

exhausted, summons one last grunt and push

to force the baby into the world

where it takes its first, sharp breath.

I bow my head to the hard work of hope.

I let it place its dull and heavy hand upon my neck.

I submit to its dour blessing.

I give up. I begin

its thankless, necessary pilgrimage.

(“Hard Work,” from After That, poems by Kathleen Aguero. Copyright 2013 by Kathleen Aguero. Reproduced by permission of Tiger Bark Press.)

Annotate

Next Chapter
Author’s Note
PreviousNext
Copyright © 2025 by Michael Ansara, All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a review, this book, or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher. For information, address Cornell University Press, Sage House, 512 East State Street, Ithaca, New York 14850. Visit our website at cornellpress.cornell.edu.
Powered by Manifold Scholarship. Learn more at
Opens in new tab or windowmanifoldapp.org