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And so finally here we are, at the beginning of a whole new era. |
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The start of a brand new world. |
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And now what? |
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How do we start? |
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How do we begin again? |
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There are some things you can simply look up, such as: |
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The size of |
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Greenland, the dates of the famous 19th century rubber wars, |
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Persian adjectives, the composition of snow. |
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And other things you just have to guess at. |
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And then again today's the day and those were the days and now these are the days and now the clock points histrionically to noon. |
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Some new kind of north. |
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And so which way do we go? |
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What are days for? |
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To wake us up, to put between the endless nights. |
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And by the way, here's my theory of punctuation: |
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Instead of a period at the end of each sentence, there should be a tiny clock that shows you how long it took you to write that sentence. |
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And another way to look at time is this: |
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There was an old married couple and they had always hated each other, never been able to stand the sight of each other, really. |
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And when they were in their nineties, they finally got divorced. |
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And people said: |
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Why did you wait so long? |
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Why didn't you do this a whole lot earlier? |
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And they said: |
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Well, we wanted to wait until the children died. |
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Ah, America. |
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And yes that will be |
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America.A whole new place just waiting to happen. |
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Broken up parking lots, rotten dumps, speed balls, accidents and hesitations. |
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Things left behind. |
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Styrofoam, computer chips. |
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And Jim and |
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John, oh, they were there. |
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And Carol, too. |
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Her hair pinned up in that weird beehive way she loved so much. |
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And Greg and |
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Phil moving at the pace of summer. |
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And Uncle |
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Al, who screamed all night in the attic. |
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Yes, something happened to him in the war they said, over in |
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France.And |
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France had become something they never mentioned. |
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Something dangerous. |
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Yeah, some were sad to see those days disappear. |
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The flea markets and their smells, the war. |
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All the old belongings strewn out on the sidewalks. |
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Mildewed clothes and old resentments and ragged record jackets. |
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And ah, these days. |
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Oh, these days. |
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What are days for? |
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To wake us up, to put between the endless nights. |
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And meanwhile all over town, checks are bouncing and accounts are being automatically closed. |
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Passwords are expiring. |
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And everyone's counting and comparing and predicting. |
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Will it be the best of times, will it be the worst of times, or will it just be another one of those times? |
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Show of hands, please. |
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And ah, this world, which like |
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Kierkegaard said, can only be understood when lived backwards. |
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Which would entail an incredible amount of planning and confusion. |
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And then there are those big questions always in the back of your mind. |
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Things like: |
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Are those two people over there actually my real parents? |
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Should I get a second |
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Prius?And you, you who can be silent in four languages: |
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Your silence will be considered your consent. |
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Oh but those were the days before the audience, and what the audience wanted, and what the audience said it wanted. |
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And you know the reason |
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I really love the stars is that we cannot hurt them. |
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We can't burn them or melt them or make them overflow. |
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We can't flood them or blow them up or turn them out. |
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But we are reaching for them. |
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We are reaching for them. |
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Some say our empire is passing, as all empires do. |
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And others haven't a clue what time it is or where it goes or even where the clock is. |
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And oh, the majesty of dreams. |
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An unstoppable train. |
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Different colored wonderlands. |
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Freedom of speech and sex with strangers. |
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Dear old God: |
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May I call you old? |
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And may I ask: |
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Who are these people? |
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Ah, America. |
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We saw it. |
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We tipped it over, and then, we sold it. |
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These are the things |
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I whisper softly to my dolls. |
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Those heartless little thugs dressed in calico kilts and jaunty hats and their perpetual white toothy smiles. |
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And oh, my brothers. |
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And oh, my sisters. |
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What are days for? |
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Days are where we live. |
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They flow and then they flow. |
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They come, they fade, they go and they go. |
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No way to know exactly when they start or when their time is up. |
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Oh, another day, another dime. |
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Another day in |
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America.Another day, another dollar. |
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Another day in |
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America.And all my brothers. |
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And all my long lost sisters. |
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How do we begin again? |
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How do we begin? |