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2012/04/17

The Shop Across the Street by SANDY McINTOSH



First it was a shoe shop.
      The shoemaker so poor,
He slept on the floor
      and resoled customer’s shoes
with cardboard.

*

When it was a clothing store
     The young owner
decorated her window
     with grace and invention,
one spring hanging a sign
     “Just Married!”
and posing manikins
       as bride and groom
holding pictures
       of her own wedding.
Another spring
       her sign read:
“It’s a boy!”and she dressed
       Her manikins
in blue
      surrounding them
with toys.
     For Halloween,
She costumed the manikins
     with sinister masks.
But in December,
     when she dressed them
in Christmas finery,
     she neglected to remove
the sinister masks—
      which troubled us
as we ate our breakfast
      and watched
from the caféacross the street.
      Later, she hung a sign:
“Divorced. Closing Store .”
      She’d stripped the window
and abandoned the manikins
      to their nakedness.
Under the stark
      neon streetlamp
they glared at us:
      Arctic snow.

*

Now the shop
      Is run by a man
selling buttons.
      He has swiveling reptilian eyes
And dresses formally,
      a lengthy metal chain
from a window curtain
      as a watch fob
on his polka-dotted vest.

              ---for Peter Blair
                                                                                                          from FORTY-NINE GURANTEED WAYS to ESCAPE DEATH
Copyright ⓒ2007 by Sandy McIntosh
Venetia's Coffee Shop, Lower Clapton, E5 / Ewan-M

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