Today and Two Thousand Years from Now

Philip Levine

The job is over. We stand under the trees
          waiting to be told what to do,
                    but the joy is over.

The darkness pours between the branches above,
          but the moon’s not yet
                    on its walk

through the night sky trailed by stars.
          Suddenly a match flares, I see
                    there are only us two,

you and I, alone together in the great room
          of the night world, two laborers
                    with nothing to do,

so I lean to the little flame and light my Lucky
          and thank you, comrade, and again
                    we are in the dark.

Let me now predict the future. Two thousand years
          from now we two will be older,
                    wiser, having escaped

the fleeting incarnations of workingmen.
          We will have risen from the earth
                    of southern Michigan

through the tangled roots of Chinese elms
          or ancient rosebushes to take
                    the tainted air

into our leaves and send it back, purified,
          down the same trail we took
                    to escape the dark.

Two thousand years passed in a flash to shed
          no more light than a wooden match
                    gave under the trees

when you and I were lost kids, more scared than
          now, but warm, useless, with names
                    and different faces.


Note: This poem is reproduced here as it appears in the April 2000 issue of The Yale Review. It was later reprinted in Philip Levine’s collection Breath, and in subsequent volumes, with minor revisions.
Philip Levine was an American poet and the author of more than twenty books. His poetry collections received a Pulitzer Prize and two National Book Awards, among other honors. He served as the poet laureate of the United States from 2011 to 2012.
Originally published:
April 1, 2000

Featured

Searching for Seamus Heaney

What I found when I resolved to read him
Elisa Gonzalez

What Happened When I Began to Speak Welsh

By learning my family's language, I hoped to join their conversation.
Dan Fox

When Does a Divorce Begin?

Most people think of it as failure. For me it was an achievement.
Anahid Nersessian

You Might Also Like


from −K

Eli Payne Mandel

House

Emily Hoffman

Newsletter

Sign up for The Yale Review newsletter to receive our latest articles in your inbox, as well as treasures from the archives, news, events, and more.