“Two-Headed Poems” by Margaret Atwood
“The heads speak sometimes singly, sometimes
together, sometimes alternately within a poem…
but we are not foreigners
to each other; we are the pressure
on the inside of the skull…
“You can’t live here without breathing
someone else’s air,
air that has been used to shape
these hidden words that are not yours…” (1, pp. 59-69)
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1. Margaret Atwood. Two-Headed Poems. NewYork, Touchstone/Simon and Schuster, 1978.
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