I’ve got what I came for:
Cover-up, cat food, and
My weekly mags.
Now,
Which line to choose?
Tills 2 and 6 are open.
It would be smart
To go to the smallest line up
But then,
I look at till 2
And the first person has
Fifty or sixty
Tid-biddly little things
To ring through.
I decide on till 6.
Such, slow, service…
The lady in front of me
Smells like she’s been
Sampling perfume.
After a patient, long, dull wait,
The till
Flashes, whirs, and dings,
And it’s finally my turn.
The bored cashier goes through
Her automatic spiel:
LD extra card? Bag? Debit or credit?
So many questions!
Just give me my order
Let me get out of here!
As I finally step out of
The confines of the over-lit store,
I feel freer and
Able to breathe again.
However,
I will probably go back
Next week
For another joyful
Experience of
Standing in
A London Drugs line up,
Waiting to pay.

The idea for “Line up At London Drugs” came from a request for a poem about an experience in a place. One place that I frequently go to is London Drugs. My insight for the poem is that everybody must learn patience with life’s little aggravations, like standing in a line up at London Drugs. I kept the poem simple and spoke from a single voice of a frustrated customer. I used sound alliteration (example: “Such, slow, service”) and onomatopoeia (example: “flashes, whirs and dings”). The images used (example: The lady in the line up that had sampled perfume) represents how most people are selfish and don’t think of others comfort ahead of themselves. The perspective that I had was that we as a human race are bound by habit and convenience, as is represented by my reluctant return to London Drugs, even though there are other places to get the same products from.
Funny as well as a good poem.
Margo
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