River watchers, rice farmers, soft-skinned fishermen
they met us on the porches, smiles and hands and hugs
they tied their good wishes to our wrists with strings,
loved with their eyes. baffled, we understood.
children ran, wide eyed and terrified
"be good or white people will eat you."
so they fled, and laughter spread
the village spilling over languages
known and unknown
the houses could not contain--
was it their curiosity or mine?
they stood right in the middle of the road
they talked and laughed and looked
they talked and laughed and looked
when did i go home?
i can't get anything to feel the same
i do the next right thing, then the next right thing
on my wrist i wear dirty string
Go-getters, hard-handed blue-collars, academic types
when do we really get to go home?
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