The MBTA Red Line at Harvard Square on a late October afternoon — a semester winding down, the track squeal before the platform, amber light past Porter, the city already queuing up the next thing.
The Red Line at Harvard Square makes a particular sound before it arrives — a high, metallic squeal as the track bends just before the platform comes into view. In late October, in the late afternoon, that sound lands differently. The semester has one foot out the door. Students filter through the mezzanine with bags that seem heavier than they did in September, professors disappear toward the exits with scarves and unfinished books, and the whole station holds a kind of residual quiet that the rush hour hasn't quite filled yet.
This song follows someone standing on that platform, watching the crowd, then boarding outbound toward Alewife. The train surfaces past Porter, and the amber light of a late October afternoon comes through the windows. Nothing is dramatically wrong. But something — a semester, a version of the year, a particular rhythm of days — is clearly finishing. The city, indifferent and ongoing, just queues up the next thing.
[Verse 1]
The inbound squeals on the curve before the platform,
that bend in the track that everybody knows —
brick-and-tile walls under forty-watt fluorescence,
the October light already going slow.
I count the stairs down to the mezzanine level,
the busker packing up his case beside the gate,
a professor with a scarf and a half-read paperback,
the afternoon dissolving into wait.
[Chorus]
Something is ending at Harvard Square,
I feel it in the cooler air,
in the way the crowd moves, slow and sure,
through the turnstile out onto the street.
[Verse 2]
A girl with headphones shifts a bag of notebooks,
her shoulder hits the tile and she doesn't look up —
the semester's last exam left a residue of stillness
on the platform, in the coffee cup.
The train fills up with faces pointing inward,
Alewife-bound, as sure as anything,
and I can't quite recall what I was supposed to be carrying
or what I'm carrying home this evening.
[Chorus]
Something is ending at Harvard Square,
I feel it in the cooler air,
in the way the crowd moves, slow and sure,
through the turnstile out onto the street.
[Verse 3]
We surface past the underpass at Porter,
the light out there is amber, almost thin —
and everyone's already somewhere else by December,
the city just keeps starting over again.
I watch the platform shrink into the distance,
the tile work gone, the fluorescence gone,
another year that narrowed to a Thursday,
another crowd of people carrying on.
[Outro]
Alewife, Alewife —
the train goes somewhere.
Alewife, Alewife —
the train goes somewhere.
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