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Vendors slice the skin of brown boxes, Releasing the vegetable blood Of green beans strung like beads, Closed fists of cauliflower, Sleepy leaves of bok choy. Pastries gilled like fishes Swim in metal bins heavy With plums and brown mushrooms Curved like noses and toes. Movement ensues As tourists photograph The lions at the gate, Regal in their burnished skins. Bodies press in Close rows to the windows Of blue and green jade genuflection, Plastic and wooden Buddha effigies Waiting to take stage In Synder's next earthly Eastern verse, In Kerouac's newest poem from Heaven. Women sing through radios, Wrapping Grant Street With shrill gasps somewhere Between orgasm and pain. Electronic deals sizzle behind glass As if satellites surrounded The fifteen block town, Fought for broadcasts From the streets and sidewalks. Kimonos of red hang on racks, Color disassociated From Mao and the book. No one is idealizing. No one is starving. Heat and bartering begin, Store owners cupping their hands To wave in the masses Like creating a movement in water, Like diving to the bottom of the ocean In search of treasures to resurface From the other side of the world. The colors yellow and green. The sidewalk smells warm. The air, saltwater And the metallic sweat Of healing balls and chirping boxes. Traffic mixes exhaust With ducks roasting in their own fat As the San Francisco Rises in America, As it always has, From the East.
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