Burma Shave Today

Remember those beloved sequential roadside signs that first appeared in 1925, along country highways and byways. Here’s what they look like today.

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Remember these original signs:

She raised Cain
When he raised stubble
Guess what
Smoothed away
Their Trouble?
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My job is
Keeping faces clean
And nobody knows
De Stubble
I’ve Seen
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On curves ahead
Remember, sonny
That rabbit’s foot
Didn’t save
The Bunny
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Short, stiff hair
Is what we’re after
We make no
Claims on
The hereafter
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Today’s billboards:

His combover hides
His stubble and brows
But hold on Martha
He’s scaring
The sows
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Putin’s shaves
Are very close
But our Pres says
His hair grows
The most
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They are no more
Hicks, Gates, and Flynn
But think of
Manafort and Cohen
And the trouble they're in
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Those daily Tweets
Are all the rage
But his
Orange hair
Reveals his age
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Bluebirds: In the Manner of Charles Bukowski

“There’s a bluebird in my heart, that wants to get out.”

But I only let him out in winter. I keep him chained by nourishing old resentments and calling these endless “to-do lists” a life.

Our “secret pact.”

“It’s enough to make me weep.”

And I do weep: for what is lost, and for what we don’t even know we’ve lost.

And for that bluebird chained to my heart, that bluebird that longs to flit among the purple berries in the blinding winter sunshine.

Yesterday there was a flock of bluebirds on my beautyberry bushes.

Maybe, just maybe, those bushes will draw that bluebird out of my hungry heart.

I linger at the sight: sun on snow, blue feathers, purple berries hurled here and there.

I weep, too, for the beauty of it all.