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High Summer Comes to South Baltimore When high summer comes to South Baltimore,
the sun stays out until past eight in the evening. Time was, old mothers
would gather on their front stoops, chattering over steaming mugs of
decaf coffee until the light above faded quietly into hues of hushed
rose and blue high above the soft hills of Riverside Park. Nowadays,
those mothers are fading as well, their comforting stoops usurped by
slick twentysomethings in suits with starched collars who carve up the
aging row homes, selling the shells when they’re through. Little
children don’t run up and down Henry Street much these days. The steeple of Saint Mary’s is a vivid blue, just slightly faded with age and marked by tiny silver grates where the deep tones of the church bell’s Credo could escape and ring out over the city on Sunday mornings. Perched at the top is a bright sapphire star, always the first star in the sky- the star I wished on, my Star Bright. On humid days, the scent of salt and Old Bay drifts in from the Harbor and mixes with the smell of machinery from Locust point. I would buy the stargazer lilies and inky-blue orchids from the market on Cross Street, where slight Asian men sell the juiciest watermelon you’ve ever tasted- its sweet nectar bursts on your tongue like the fruit of Paradise. I spent those sticky summer days seeking refuge on the second story of my favorite bookstore, reverently fingering the Bible-thin pages of books of Pandora mythology, or afternoons sipping coffee in Mount Vernon, watching as stone fountains splashed crystal water in the shadow of verdigris-spidered cathedrals. When high summer comes to South Baltimore, the twilight air shimmers with possibility, with anticipation. It reveals all the secrets of the somber alleyways and the bowed oak trees in the parks, showing the intangible magic that hides just beneath the cracking cement. Traversing the labyrinth of familiar streets in graceful reverie, my footsteps would mingle with the rustle of the cherry blossoms and the laughter of the pre-teens on the corners. I would unwrap the mysteries of the living city like the delicate gold foil of a Perugina chocolate, like a precious gift- petal by petal, avenue by avenue, streetlight by streetlight. Some say that you always return to the city you first fall in love with. I have no doubt that this is true- I only hope that it is that same city I left behind, the city I loved sure on that shining night. -back- |
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