Bars and Shadows: The Prison Poems of Ralph Chaplin
by Ralph Chaplin
About this book
Ralph Chaplin and many other prominent members of the Industrial Workers of the World were imprisoned under the Espionage Act of 1917 as the United States entered World War I. As with Socialist presidential candidate Eugene V. Debs, these activists were accused of undermining recruiting efforts and the draft - even of encouraging soldiers to desert. Though they never gained the universal popularity of his anthem "Solidarity Forever," the poems and songs in this volume - composed during his four years in prison - represent the defiant attitude of a true rebel in the face of persecution. - Summary by Ben Adams
Chapters (30)
1Mourn Not the Dead
2Taps
3Night in the Cell House
4Prison Shadows
5Prison Reveille
6Prison Nocturne
7The Warrior Wind
8To Freedom
9The Vision Maker
10Distances
11Phantoms
12Seven Little Sparrows
13Salaam!
14The West is Dead
15Up From Your Knees
16The Eunuch
17I.W.W. Prison Song
18To France
19Villanelle
20Wesley Everest
21The Industrial Heretics
22Blood and Wine
23The Red Guard
24The Red Feast
25The Girls Who Sang for Us
26To Edith
27Song of Separation
28To My Little Son
29Escaped!
30Retrospect

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