Monday, March 24, 2014

Jess Govier: The Apothecary

With yellow-white hair that streams over shoulders,
fingers pierce webs written on the skin to move over labels on the jars.
My hands are clamped into the dust
of the cedar counter,
                                    and my eyes above the film
watch her in this dark alcove she stubbornly guards as her own. 


The coins sit on the counter, a gaudy speck that shimmers without
obvious cause like the one in her eye. The air is damp down here
and the walls themselves creak and groan in their old age, but there is
a grace to her movements,
                                    a swiftness and surety
the clumsiness of my young body can’t hope to keep pace with.


She grinds up bulbs and roots, tips in powders and potions,
Does she care for those she saves outside her desolate underground?
or does she just relish the scent of mixed remedies on her fingertips?
as she slides the corked green bottle to me,
and for a moment I think she smiles
before I dash into the sunlight, feeling dust settle on my skin.


                                    

1 comment:

Unknown said...

I love how the irregular nature of the stanzas plays with the idea of human thought. You could probably play with the Stanzas a little more but not too much. Great description I almost feel dusty having read the poem :)