PIGALLE
 This Rue is where my daughter plans to live:
 a tatoo artist yelling at a drunk;
 three old men sun their leathered chests and give
 her leering looks; a flame-haired punk
 holds fresh baguette and tiny dogs on leads;
 a corner bar boasts cross-dress cabaret;
 the scent of urine rises; heat forms beads
 of sweat – a spring Parisian bouquet.
 But strangers share their picnic in the park
 and she will climb five flights of champagne night
 where rooftops of Montmartre after dark
 gleam with reflected gold and ruby light,
 throw wide the shutters, sip the air’s rich wine,
 intoxicated, think, “All this is mine.”
