Roses in December
It was almost 70 degrees yesterday as I made my way along New Jersey Avenue to the Capitol. A small wind was whiffling the pansies, stirring the purples and yellows and the dark green leaves. I moseyed down a section of tree-lined street that reminds me of Paris, with the U.S. Capitol winking through what's left of the leaves.
The broad plaza of the East Front entrance was filled with shirt-sleeved tourists snapping photos, but noon light drained color from the scene. I turned left down East Capitol, passing the Library and the Folger and a bookstore I always intend to visit but never do. Roses were still blooming, tumbling along fence posts and garden gates. In the air, the smell of new-mown grass.
Everyone was out in the warm weather — dog-walkers and nannies pushing prams and office workers on a lunchtime jog. There's a park where I usually turn around, and today I strode right through the middle of it. I never knew what it was called until I checked a map after my stroll. It's Lincoln Park — and not at all like its Chicago counterpart — but now I'll never forget the name.
The broad plaza of the East Front entrance was filled with shirt-sleeved tourists snapping photos, but noon light drained color from the scene. I turned left down East Capitol, passing the Library and the Folger and a bookstore I always intend to visit but never do. Roses were still blooming, tumbling along fence posts and garden gates. In the air, the smell of new-mown grass.
Everyone was out in the warm weather — dog-walkers and nannies pushing prams and office workers on a lunchtime jog. There's a park where I usually turn around, and today I strode right through the middle of it. I never knew what it was called until I checked a map after my stroll. It's Lincoln Park — and not at all like its Chicago counterpart — but now I'll never forget the name.
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