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A road runs down Harvard called Massachusetts Avenue as if we own the whole state. Because we do. We took the land from its people. Violently. And who is we? Ambulances burn red nightly-casual outside the window of this pale yellow building opposite the smaller university hospital. The red reminds me of a different kind of burning. Of bodies. Wonderful cremations of us down that tree over there next to the libraries that now belong to us. And who is us? I am reminded of the burning because the red is part of the white and the blue and the sirens and the men launching out of their cars with faces saying, in strange tongues, strange indeed, And who are you?
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Nov 9, 2018
Nov 9, 2018 at 4:54 PM UTC
Poem (Late Night, 46 Dunster St.)
A road runs down Harvard called Massachusetts Avenue as if we own the whole state. Because we do. We took the land from its people. Violently. And who is we? Ambulances burn red nightly-casual outside the window of this pale yellow building opposite the smaller university hospital. The red reminds me of a different kind of burning. Of bodies. Wonderful cremations of us down that tree over there next to the libraries that now belong to us. And who is us? I am reminded of the burning because the red is part of the white and the blue and the sirens and the men launching out of their cars with faces saying, in strange tongues, strange indeed, And who are you?
tawandamulalu
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Nov 9, 2018
Nov 9, 2018 at 4:54 PM UTC
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