[His father carved umbrella handles...]

His father carved umbrella handles, but when umbrella
    handles were made by machinery, there was only one
    man for whom his father could work.
The pay was small, though it had once been a good trade.
They lived in the poorest part of the ghetto, near the lots
    where people dump ashes.
His father was anxious that his son should stay at school and
    get out of the mess he himself was in. “Learning is the
    best merchandise,” he would say.
His father died; there was his mother to be taken care of. He
    taught in a school in the ghetto.
Some pupils came at nine and stayed until three; others came
    after public school and stayed until evening; most of the
    pupils came in the evening.
The courses were crammed, lasting a few months, pupils and
    teachers anxious to be rid of the matter as soon as
    possible.
So he worked day and night, week-days and Sunday.

His mother was dead. It was cold in the street and windy. A
    dry snow had fallen and the feet of the walkers were
    turning it into brown sand.
He was forty.
Now he was free. To do what? He knew no one whom he
    cared to marry. And who would go into his poverty?
If he were to give up this work he knew so well, to what else
    could he turn?
He would just keep on. He had lost this world and knew there
    was no other.

Copyright Credit: A Fourth Group of Verse, Section 42: “His father carved umbrella handles” from The Poems of Charles Reznikoff by Charles Reznikoff, Edited by Seamus Cooney. Repreinted by permission of Black Sparrow Books, an imprint of David R. Godine, Publisher, Inc. Copyright 2005 by Charles Reznikoff.
Source: Poems 1918-1975: The Complete Poems of Charles Reznikoff (Black Sparrow Press, 1977)