Ewan MacColl
Nobody Knew She Was There
[Verse 1]
She walks in the cold dark hour before the morning
The hour when wounded night begins to bleed
Stands at the back of the patient queue
The silent almost sweeping queue
Seeing no one and not being seen
[Verse 2]
Working shoes are wrapped in working apron
Rolled in oiled-cloth bag across her knee
The swaying tremor soaks the morning
Blue grey steely day is dawning
Draining the last few dregs of sleep away
[Verse 3]
Over the bridge the writhing foul black water
Down through empty corridors of stone
Each of the blind glass walls she passes
Shows her twin in sudden flashes
Which is the mirror image, which is real?
[Verse 4]
Crouching hooded gods of word and number
Accept her bent-backed homage as their due
Buckets steam like incense coils
Around the endless floor she toils
Cleaning the same white sweep each day anew
[Verse 5]
Glistening sheen of new-washed floors is fading
There where office clocks are marking time
Night's black tide has ebbed away
By cliffs of glass awash with day
She hurries from her labour still unseen
[Verse 6]
He who lies besides her does not see her
Nor does the child who once lay at her breast
The shroud of self-denial covers
Eager girl and tender lover
Only the faded servant now is left
[Verse 7]
How could it be that no one saw her drowning?
How did we come to be so unaware?
At what point did she cease to be her?
When did we cease to look and see her?
How is it no one knew that she was there?