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The clouds and the stars didn't wage this war the brooks gave no information if the mountains spewed stones of fire into the river it was not taking sides the raindrop faintly swaying under the leaf had no political opinions
and if there were a house filled with backed-up raw sewage or poisoned those who lived there with slow fumes, over years the houses were not at war nor did the tinned up buildings
intend to refuse shelter to homeless old women and roaming children they had no policy to keep from roaming or dying, no, cities were not the problem the bridges were non-partisan the freeways burned, but not with hatred
Even miles of barbed-wire stretched around crouching temporary huts designed to keep the unwanted at a safe distance, out of sight even the boards, that had to absorb year upon year, so many human sounds
so many depths of vomit, tears slow-soaking blood had not offered themselves for this The trees didn't volunteer to be cut into boards nor the thorns for tearing flesh Look around at all of it
and ask whose signature is stamped on the orders, traced in the corner of the building plans Ask where the illiterate, big-bellied women were, the drunks and the crazies, the ones you fear most of all: ask where you were.
Adrienne Rich
Read poems about / on: women, war, river, house, children, fire, fear, city, woman, child, star, tree
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