The Men
The Men - meaning Summary
Voices of the Marginalized
The poem gives voice to an anonymous, impoverished laborer who lists places and hardships to represent Third World dispossession. He confronts the promise of a new era and finds only persistent poverty, exclusion and structural neglect. The speaker’s bitter irony and inventory of need expose inequality: global progress does not reach him. The poem frames personal suffering as emblematic of broader social injustice and the continuing geography of hunger.
Read Complete AnalysesI'm Ramon Gonzalez Barbagelata from anywhere, from Cucuy, from Paraná, from Rio Turbio, from Oruro, from Maracaibo, from Parral, from Ovalle, from Loconmilla, I'm the poor devil from the poor Third World, I'm the third-class passenger installed, good God! in the lavish whiteness of snow-covered mountains, concealed among orchids of subtle idiosyncrasy. I've arrived at this famous year 20000, and what do I get? With what do I scratch myself?— What do I have to do with the three glorious zeros that flaunt themselves over my very own zero, my own non-existence? Pity that brave heart awaiting its call or the man enfolded by warmer love, nothing's left today except my flimsy skeleton, my eyes unhinged, confronting the era's beginning. The era's beginning: are these ruined shacks, these poor schools, these people still in rags and tatters, this cloddish insecurity of my poor families, is all this the day? the century's beginning, the golden door? Well, enough said, I, at least, discreet, as in office, patched and pensive, I proclaim the redundancy of the inaugural: I've arrived here with all my baggage, bad luck and worse jobs, misery always waiting with open arms, the mobilization of people piled up on top of each other, and the manifold geography of hunger.
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