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HST 123: Empires and Globalization

“Ask me about my patches”

 

Was written in Sharpie on a piece of cardboard hung by string and Duck tape from

his backpack.

 

I didn’t dare ask.

I was late.

 

The image of hipster: gauged ears, lip and nose pierced, cut-off jacket vest, tight

black jeans, —and patches.

 

I didn’t dare ask him.

But I was forced to read the large one sewn across his back.

 

That’s when I realized my first judgment was wrong. Not an image: he was a force,

his patches his power.

 

That was all just a glance, just a memory of a patch of the face of a woman

with streaked black hair, a tear? its fading... but the words won’t.

 

The words that I won’t tell; the words that carry with them the power of

the history of man.

 

Not of humans, of man: man who has ruled this world, man who has buried mother earth

(alive) deep inside herself.

 

Who pinned her down and penetrated all orifices— inserting, and removing and inseminating;

making her pregnant with ********

 

Man—men—when did we do this? Who was the first among us to realize his

superior strength?

 

I don’t dare ask because I am not ready for the answer.

I am not ready to ask myself the questions that I feel but don’t know.

 

I realize when I pass someone on the street, I don’t know anything—every woman I see at

night has a past, every man and every child.

I don’t know any of it.

 

But, I do know some about the history of man.

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Written by
matt-bancroft
American
Published
Feb 22, 2013
Lines·Words
27·259
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