Nostrums? Lordy, I  have seen them all.  
Alcohol’s the  favorite. Many a quack’s  
panacea bottled in a  cellar and hawked  
from door to door is  thriving still. 
Bindweed’s supposed  to heal a bruise.  
Cherokee remedies  still survive, 
and slave  recipes—hyssop, juniper, chives.  
Waitress, freshen  this elixir, if you please. 
One day a hefty woman  who works a loom  
down at Pepperell  Mills sauntered in 
with no appointment  and perched herself prim  
as an English queen  in the waiting room. 
What happened next?  For a prolapsed  
uterus, folk medicine  recommends  
inserting an Irish  potato. It works, 
if you can stand the  weight, my friends. 
Well, she’d relied on  that specific 
since winter. We’d  hit, you understand, July,  
and her complaint,  not one bit shy, 
was, Leaves in my  virginia. Not beatific, 
no, but she was  composed, no maniac, 
and it made some  sense. What better place  
than a protected  pocket, warm and moist? 
But the spud had  sprouted, sent runners amok. 
You never know in  these flatland burley  
counties if your  manual skills will bloom  
as sawbones or  private gardener. Deftly, 
I removed the  obstruction and took it home. 
I’ve raised a whole  colony in my window box,  
and bake, fry, or  boil, I’m proud as hell  
of this year’s crop.  The woman paid her bill  
with eggs and  applejack. Life is a paradox. 
Now I’ve got to rush  back and tend my flock.  
Got appointments at  four—a pregnant lady,  
a leg to set, twins  to inspect for chicken pox,  
and Marvin with his  routine emergency. 
I guess you could say  my practice is thriving.  
Drop by, and I’ll fry  you up some shallot  
hash browns in  Margie’s seasoned skillet,  
a flavor I can  promise is sure to revive 
any ailing soul.  Where do I get my onions?  
Don’t ask. The whole  sweet world is a gardenR. T. Smith
This is too weird for words. For once I'm speechless!
ReplyDeleteIt is apparently based on an urban myth. Many doctors claim to have known someone who treated a woman who....
ReplyDeleteHowever, when I had a friend who was studying medicine, many years ago, I recall going to visit for a few days, and being shown into the hospital's library/museum, which contained, amongst many other strange things, (the skeleton of the elephant-man, for instance), a cabinet of things retrieved from various bodily orifices.
Believe me, a sprouting potato is not weird at all!