A CONGREGATION OF BOTTLES
Brilliant rays of light stream in a window with a clarity
he once saw in a ravine of light in northern Maine.
Awakened by a kiss of the sun he views a row
of hand-blown glass century- old apothecary bottles
illuminated on a windowsill with dream-like bubbles,
but no chips or cracks. Some cut crystal stoppers
have been replaced by tilted corks simulating
party-goers back from an after-hours club.
His life-long collection of bottles of verdant green,
opaque white and cobalt blue once rode the wagons
of patent medicine men, labeled in black, red and gold,
painted in ribbons, scrolls and floral designs:
Dr.Josephus Great Shoshones Remedy, Dr. Baker’s Pain Panacea
and Kickapoo Indian Sagwa’s Blood, Liver and Stomach Renovator.
Elixirs, mostly alcohol, often spiked with strychnine or cocaine
guaranteed miraculous cures.
Victorian snake-oil salesmen are now replaced by supplement
salesmen hawking products like Noni juice, Hoodia Gordonii,
Uva Ursi and Bulgarian Tribulus Terrestris.
Dozing back to sleep he dreams of rubbing a bottle
to coax out a genie to grant a wish, but his wish
remains the same as it was blowing out candles
since the age of six; it must remain the same,
or it surely won’t come true.
Plus ca change, plus ca demeure le meme.
More light, more light, more light, he longs for eternal verities.