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