Homespun poetry that makes people happy.

Old-Time General Store

Give us the old-time general store

With pungent sawdust on the floor

The big icebox and its walk-in door,

And a stock  boy dawdling with his chores.

 

The grocer smiled when you paid him cash,

With ample apron and a big mustache,

He handed candy to the kids

From big glass jars with widemouthed lids.

 

You traded butter, eggs and cream,

And wandered around in a diner’s dream;

Amber wedges of longhorn cheese,

He’d cut a bite if you asked him please.

 

The open cracker box nearby

Inviting everyone to try;

He stored his coal-oil cans far out,

A tater stuck on the pouring spout.

 

Lamp chimney, too, all packed to go

We’d break one every week or so

Gay-colored thread on tiny spools,

Calico prints and garden tools.

 

A big iron stove, black pipe, some chairs

Where oldsters settled the town’s affairs.

A room piled full of good, plain things,

Stuffed into sacks and tied with strings;

 

“Dry goods and notions,” how well I see

That faded sign in my memory.

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