They are your children, their cheeks warm and fair,

While Tony’s a hunky, so—What do you care?

Over the bridges, the hills, and the fen,

Streams the procession of undersized men

Climbing the stairs to the waiting machines:

Lowered in cages to death-marked ravines.

Look at their faces; sad, pinched and worn!

Look at their garments; threadbare and torn!

Look at their swagger, their precocious air,

Some mother’s babies, but—What do you care?