Poem 29
Home
Services
Store
Poets Corner

The Clothesline

    A clothesline was a news forecast
    To neighbors passing by.
    There were no secrets you could keep
    When clothes were hung to dry.

    It also was a friendly link
    For neighbors always knew
    If company had stopped on by
    To spend a night or two.

    For then you'd see the fancy sheets
    and towels on the line;
    You'd see the comp'ny tableclothes
    With intricate design.

    The line announced a baby's birth
    To folks who lived inside
    As brand new infant clothes were hung
    So carefully with pride.

    The ages of the children could
    So readily be known
    By watching how the sizes changed
    You'd know how much they'd grown.

    It also told when illness struck,
    As extra sheets were hung;
    Then nightclothes, and a bathrobe, too,
    Haphazardly were strung.

    It said, "Gone on vacation now"
    When lines hung limp and bare.
    It told, "We're back!" when full lines sagged
    With not an inch to spare.

    New folks in town were scorned upon
    If wash was dingy gray,
    As neighbors raised their brows, and looked
    Disgustedly away.

    But clotheslines now are of the past
    For dryeres make work less.
    Now what goes on inside a home
    Is anybody's guess

    I really miss that way of life.
    It was a friendly sign
    When neighbors knew each other best
    By what hung on the line!

    by Marilyn Walker

Next Poem Previous Poem