Summary
A narrator is telling
someone to play a game with her. In the first stanza the narrator explains a
different side of a story of border patrol agents using their authority. She explains that because they have guns and
Jeeps and power, they can abuse Mexican women. Since they cannot speak Spanish they
don’t answer questions and sexually abuse women because they have the strength
to overpower them and have their way with them. The narrator describes it as a
sort of cat-and mouse game the border patrol plays with Mexican Immigrants
saying “Get ready, get set, run”. In the second stanza the narrator reverses
roles and says that because the border patrol agents don’t know Spanish and the
land on which their vehicles trot that they cannot find the Mexican immigrants
easily and all they hear is immigrants laughing and teasing them in the breeze.
The narrator teases the agents by saying “get ready” perhaps for the revenge of
her people against the corrupt agents.
Reader
Response
That was depressing,
Ms. Ramirez! It was dark and told the other sides of the story, so to speak,
about Mexican immigrants who are miss treated by American officers of the law. The
first stanza was easier to follow than the second stanza, I think. But after
you re-read it the message becomes clear, the narrator wants her revenge. I
think after reviewing it, it was a good poem with a strong message and a firm
tone. It tried to play off of a child game, making what the agents do seem even
more corrupt. It had a creepy vibe to it but I think it had good imagery, I imagined
right away a lonely desert where no one can hear the cries of Mexican women
being rapped. It was a very powerful poem, to say the least.
Good comments on your feelings after reading this poem!
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