there were dandelions on the grass dear girl, the smell of an Alcatraz flower is fresh on my linen but sometimes I look back and wonder if this city wears a too thick a coat while it struts pantless over the sidewalks of Macarther Park
there is liturgy mumbled, a woman waving her hands in the air– Sunday school prayers being learned in Spanish tri-folded pamphlets on the floor and gum over the pavement blackened by the cooperative march of immigrant workers speaking in all tongues and carrying on their backs, the tower of babel while halted at a red light
heavy cargo trucks speeding down Alameda Street wearing down the road and the patience of drivers tents multiplied, and R.V's lining the streets the old buildings being torn down and neighboring apartments getting face-lifts "beautification" costs more than headshots– more than a rhinoplasty– more than the real estate of DTLA– when you see two kids come out of a tent with their school backpacks on –you begin to grasp the price
Is this what Keats meant: "A thing of beauty is a joy forever " even while destitute the neon pink on their bags seemed like another gift of spring and their perseverance the paragon of a psalm of life