fold arms of tweed over arms of tweed,
plump up jumpers, tuck price tags inside shirts,
then stare out windows with heads like anvils
that haven’t been struck in an age.
In polka dot ties with striped shirts,
they make sweeping statements derived
from the world of cottons, linens, wools
without an ounce of Sisyphean grace.
I knew the false bravado of such men once,
after a lover left, when I’d to look the other way
from the strand of hair pulled from a plughole
and the leftovers of our last meal, a cooked chicken
under a cover of foil I could not touch, patted as it had been under her hands.
Through shop windows, I stare at them
staring back at me and, with our reflections
bearing down on us, we return
to this dumb business called living.
Evan Costigan won the 2012 Francis Ledwidge Poetry Award and was shortlisted for the 2014 Hennessy Literary Awards. He received a poetry bursary from Kildare County Council arts office in 2012.