.
Washington, D.C.: photographer unknown, US Housing Authority, 1933 (Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library)
Receding back into the shaded
and checkered light of day
and checkered light of day
Chicago, South Side, under the "El': photographer unknown, US Housing Authority, 1933 (Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library)
Receding up one street and down another. This is a sad little gem. (Actually, with two remarkable photographs and two lines of poetry it's not so little.) It's fascinating how Washington DC and Chicago both look like villages, not cities.
ReplyDeleteIt was the light and shade in the two photos that placed them together for me. There is indeed a "village" quality to poverty, in the global and historical sense.
ReplyDeleteWonderful poem.
ReplyDeleteYes Tom. What you assert is such a grave truth. Villages are now supposed to be poor. Cities, is where the wealth resides albeit shielded by massive glass screens which reflect off the vanity poverty breathes never to stop breathing.
Aditya,
ReplyDeleteThose few sentences of yours, like these two photos, provide a capture of the times.