Old Downtown as a Rainy Day Memory

Old Downtown as a Rainy Day Memory

A Poem by kentuck14

OLD DOWNTOWN AS A RAINY DAY MEMORY

On a rainy day when the air is thick with the sound of
dripping eaves and running gutters, I’m being lazy---
laying on the sofa and reminiscing of the old downtown
of my 1950's hometown in northeast Pennsylvania.
An image of Bolish’s Hardware drifts before me
with its industrious smells and scuffed, unvarnished
hardwood floors that creaked with age at every step
toward screws, bolts, nuts and washers stored away in
metal bins---later carefully dropped into 3x5 paper sacks
like candy for a kid, a sporadic Mr. Fix-It confidently
carrying away his cache---a symbol of his heroic self-
                            reliance.

My mind then wanders into Woolworths’ lunch bar---
hidden behind the rows of shelves packed tight with
household goods, toys, knickknacks, and other sundries
meant to fulfill the simple plans of housewives and the
                    wants of their children.
Here, head-scarved ladies served BLT sandwiches
on white bread with chips and a pickle on the side.
I would hope for all my worth my mother would order
me a glass of chocolate milk---knowing full well a bubbly
sugar-sweet soft-drink was out of the question. Suddenly

I’m recollecting the Sunday morning newsstand
where my father drove right after nine o’clock Mass---
its narrow confines choked with piles of Sunday papers,
racks of magazines, cigarettes, cigars, pipe tobacco, and
the ugly stuff my Uncle Gene loved to chew and spit into
empty milk cartons scattered around his house and lawn
            like sentries at their post. Here, my
Dad would buy a copy of the Elmira Telegram for the
local news and comics, and the New York Daily News
with its fascinating photos of Fifties’ Big Apple action.

I’m picturing the old downtown park with its diagonal,
crisscrossing  sidewalks, iron benches and towering elms
set between Desmond Street’s row of shops and the 1888 
              railroad station on Lehigh Avenue---
a park soon to be replaced by Newberrys’ brand new
cinder block store---a modern eyesore that blocked
railyard activity from the still interested ghosts and
            gawkers of the town’s railroad doings.

I’m recalling the Lehigh Valley railyard, seen from atop
the grime covered iron foot bridge to the Polish “East side.”  
I see it’s many tracks like claw marks in the sooty dirt;
even more are concealed by boxcars, tankers and coal cars
resembling long earthworms risen from the ground after
            a sudden storm. I can almost smell
the fumes from passing diesel-electric switchers shuttling
loaded cars into their proper place for the long rail ride to
            Buffalo or the Jersey City Terminal.
Later, as I  lay in bed, fantasizing in the muggy summer night,
the one & a half  mile away bang of couplers hitting couplers
would lull me into easy childhood sleep---much like drifting  
into the time laden sleep of an aging and daydreaming man.

© 2019 kentuck14


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Reviews

An exploration of the depth of memory and the richness of everyday life. Delightful and well-crafted.

Posted 3 Years Ago


Bunny,
Thanks for reading and commenting. If I were playing that game today . . . the only antique would be me!
T

Posted 5 Years Ago


Hey Kentuck:) I really enjoyed this reminiscence. Im a western Pa guy but much of your memories of small town Pa ring a familiar tune even in "Pittsburgh" (that they love to call the biggest small town in America) if you juxtapose Woolworth for Isalys and my favorite Hardware store (TNT) I used to love to play stump the hardware guys game with the old clerks and bring them my strange antiques I would periodically find or better yet ask them how to fix something strange that always got them going:) great write!!

Posted 5 Years Ago


An interesting array of recollections painted vividly with a good balance between things & people. In my hyperactive youth, I never sat & thought about ANYTHING! Then I became disabled (neck injury) & it was hard to slow myself down & cope with inactivity. Now that I've mastered it, I can very much appreciate how such a mind wander comes about, prompted by rain, or most anything other damn thing! *wink! wink!* Love this! Fondly, Margie

Posted 5 Years Ago


kentuck14

5 Years Ago

Margie,
Thanks for the sharing and your kind words. I'm quite enjoying my mind's activities.<.. read more
barleygirl

5 Years Ago

Recently some young whippersnapper posted something about how all the old people do is write about t.. read more
kentuck14

5 Years Ago

they don't have a past.
Packed full of memories. What a nostalgia trip you have taken us on. It is wonderful at times to just drift off deeper and deeper into the detail of those old days, capturing the scents, the noise and the feelings those moments bring. Staying there a while, lingering before you snap back into reality of the new store about to replace a lovely park. There's change for certain, but not necessarily progress in my opinion. A great descriptive piece of writing Tom.

Chris

Posted 5 Years Ago


kentuck14

5 Years Ago

Chris,
Thanks for the kind review . . . funny thing about nostalgia . . . It has a way of cre.. read more
Chris Shaw

5 Years Ago

You are welcome Tom. Have a great day my friend.
Wow very interesting how you describe and narrate here. The headscarf line caught my attention as I wear that. Great super way you recollect and depict the scenes. Kudos.

Pls pleez do review/ comment/ give yer thoughts on my newest poem. I like Interaction for the human feel.

Posted 5 Years Ago


kentuck14

5 Years Ago

S,
Thanks for your words . . . the headscarf was the style for many women back in the 50's, p.. read more
Great daydream, a nostalgic wonder trip, well written, reads like a Seasick Steve, talking blues song, don't know if he is big in the States but you should check him out,

Posted 5 Years Ago


kentuck14

5 Years Ago

Thanks Gram . . . I just might do that!
T
I enjoyed this ride to the past on Kentuck's way-back machine. Though your environment was far less primitive than mine, we saw saw life through similar eyes. The bit about hardwood floors made me think of McCreary's general store where the old fellow used some kind of red sawdust material when he swept.

Posted 5 Years Ago


kentuck14

5 Years Ago

Hey Sam,
Thanks for stopping by. The 50's might've seemed modern then . . . but looking back .. read more
This is delicious....what a great piece of Americana this is. You hit the sights, the smells, the sounds and nostalgia that gives me goose bumps every time. Masterful my friend, loved this immensely!

Posted 5 Years Ago


kentuck14

5 Years Ago

C,
Thanks for your enthusiastic review. Yeah the old town ain't what it use to be! Come to th.. read more
Great period piece Tom. Your many descriptive details bring the sights, sounds and smells of your childhood in northeast Pennsylvania to life. I can picture the railyard as you nostalgically narrate, “I see its many tracks like claw marks in the sooty dirt.” This is an authentic, well-written and truly captivating write.

Posted 5 Years Ago


kentuck14

5 Years Ago

A,
Thanks for your most gracious review. The old railyard has all but disappeared. Rail cars .. read more

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Added on July 2, 2019
Last Updated on July 2, 2019

Author

kentuck14
kentuck14

Lexington, KY



About
Started reading and writing poetry while in the Army many years ago. I picked up a book of poems by Leonard Cohen in a bookshop on Monterrey CA's Fisherman's Wharf and went on from there. I've had a n.. more..

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