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The only liberal neighborhood
My old neighborhood had streets
  Well worn, trodden into my memory
  Through years of walking across them
  The purple house that was
  Next door, and the
  Gray house, now painted orange
  On the other side
  With the gate between
  Our house and theirs
  Often pushed open by
  Enthusiastic dogs
  Down the street was
  Mr. Leonard’s house and
  My parents would go there
  To watch the football game
  And eat gumbo and
  Farther down was the
  Overpriced bakery with the
  Cupcakes with too much icing
  When spring was still too cold to
  Actually be called such
  And the weather was gloomy
  And clouds weren’t confident enough
  To turn the drizzled rain
  Into a thunderstorm
  And the cold soaked through your
  Fingers and your pockets could
  Never really warm them up --
  That was when the Highland Parade
  Marched through my neighborhood
  It always went through
  My neighborhood, and it
  Never was quite as grand as
  The other parades but somehow
  It was always better, because
  I saw people I knew riding
  On homemade floats and throwing
  Plastic necklaces that sparkled
  In the air, and always got caught
  In the branches of the tress
  No matter how carefully they threw them
  And even though
  We would all turn our backs
  When the men marched through
  Carrying the Confederate flag
  Through the streets
  And afterward, the grown-ups
  Would argue with those men
  Over the phone, and ask why
  They did that every year
  Even though there were
  Those men marching through
  And it soured that bit,
  The parade always brought
  Festivities and people visiting
  And beforehand, the adults went to the
  Mardi Gras Ball all dressed in
  Silly costumes while the kids
  Of the neighborhood stayed home
  And ate pizza while watching whatever
  Was on cable at the orange house next door
  And then the next morning we would
  All go to Mr. Boz’s restaurant that used to
  Be a car garage and we would
  Eat beignets at two tables pushed together and
  Half of us would be smooshed up against the wall
  And Mr. Boz would give us hugs when we got
  Up to leave
  And now that I have left there
  I often miss the
  Kindness and the old friends that
  I grew up with, in the house I lived
  My whole life in
  And when I walk down the
  Streets of my old neighborhood
  It never feels quite right because
  Although Mr. Leonard still invites
  People over to watch football and
  Mr. Boz still hugs me when I see him
  The orange house next door is empty
  And overgrown
  And the family next door has moved on
  And I have to realize that
  The time I spent in my neighborhood --
  The only liberal neighborhood in Shreveport --
  Has come to an end

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