Alley’s General Store

<p><b><i> Alley&#8217;s General Store</i></b></p> <p></p> <p> <i> In times of yore, one humble store</i></p> <p><i> Sustained our tiny town.</i></p> <p><i> &lsquo;Twas not the kind where one might find</i></p> <p><i> A fancy evening gown.</i></p> <p><i> Instead, our needs &mdash; from nails to seeds &mdash;</i></p> <p><i> Were modest as the dickens,</i></p> <p><i> And Nancy Luce had little use</i></p> <p><i> For lipstick on her chickens.</i></p> <p><i></i></p> <p><i> These wooden walls held overalls</i></p> <p><i> To fit most any size;</i></p>

Alley’s General Store

 

In times of yore, one humble store

Sustained our tiny town.

‘Twas not the kind where one might find

A fancy evening gown.

Instead, our needs — from nails to seeds —

Were modest as the dickens,

And Nancy Luce had little use

For lipstick on her chickens.

 

These wooden walls held overalls

To fit most any size;

A length of rope, a pound of soap,

A swatter for the flies.

We stocked these shelves to suit ourselves,

From cloth to cans of soup;

And if you’d heard the latest word,

You heard it on this stoop.

 

This heavy door, this creaky floor,

Have long gone unadorned,

And those who seek a chic boutique

Are urgently forewarned:

The goods inside are cut-and-dried,

No frills, no doubt about it.

“If it ain’t here,” they say with cheer,

“You’re better off without it.”

 

The months and years have churned like gears

Within our church-clock steeple,

But time and taste have not erased

This thread that binds our people;

For you can ride both far and wide

Throughout these hills and valleys

And find no store a town loves more

Than our own faithful Alley’s!

 

— Daniel Waters

West Tisbury poet laureate

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