Feature > Poetry
Fascination
Raleigh filled his cargo hold with sassafras to carry it
from the New World to England hoping it cured syphilis
which it didn't, but its fragrance was just heavenly
enough to make you think a miracle wasn't completely
out of the question. Elizabeth herself looked out across the blue
hypnosis of Ocean, saw infection in the form of 132
Spanish vessels and prohibited the setting sail of any
one of England's own, having awakened to a military
need for many hulls; for masts that tower; for wind-
loud fabrics but bettered with use; for decks seasoned
by the tread of subjects—their finer, British aspects, reserve
and so forth. Meanwhile, John White, governor of
Roanoke, rich in sassafras but otherwise an inauspicious
choice for the crown's toehold in the Americas, is
back in town for emergency supplies and aid, but given
Elizabeth's "stay of shipping," won't be allowed to return
to Roanoke for years. Two long years White pounds his pewter
tankard down, having abandoned wife and daughter
to an end without an author, his tankard cylindrical,
lidded with an acorn thumbpiece, and filled with ale
whose froth spatters on the tabletops in meaningful patterns
he can't yet discern: first the arrowhead of Hatteras,
then a crescent of the Armada, then at last a mitten or
one- or three-lobed leaf of sassafras, frequent thickener
of stews for the Choctaw, who still dry its foliage and grind
it into a powder high in mucilage, which is found
also in quantity in okra, whose seedpods are said to have
been taken from Africa to feed the colonies' growing slave
population as cheaply as possible. High on the list of
heat- and drought-resistant crops, okra means to live
despite untenable conditions and deserves a tribute
unique among those owed to every plant whose leaf, root,
flower, berry, bark or fruit has gotten us as far as this
without complaint: aloe, apple, artichoke, and asparagus
to start, then aubergine, a favorite of Alexander the Great
who carried it from India and into Babylon despite
his astronomer's warning that the thunderous local deity
Marduk had enough already, but the Macedonian was pretty
sure a promise to repair Marduk's temple—in ruins since
Sennacherib toppled it, and felt by fringe historians
to have been the true Tower of Babel—might serve to soften
the god's heart. But apparently not. Alexander's coffin,
all gold, filled with rumored honey and carried west, far
from his deathbed in the palace built by Nebuchadnezzar
centuries earlier, came to rest in Alexandria, founded by
and named for himself, site where his successor Ptolemy
eventually built the celebrated library that Callimachus
worked at, and whose fiery destruction was traumatic as
a blunt force to the head of humanity. You can still feel it
today. Cherokee drank a tea of sassafras root to dispollute
the blood in Raleigh's day, but knew never to drink it more
than a week at a time. English colonists came, saw
and concocted a copycat tonic that mutated into the diet
root beer I have here, its frothy head no longer an intricate
play of sassafras mucilage because the FDA determined
a principle in the root was hepatocarcinogenic to rodent
life in 1960. Now most manufacturers add extract of soapbark
to parrot the effect. In his Life of Alexander, Plutarch
recalls that the hero was born on the same day Herostratus
set the Temple of Diana in Ephesus ablaze so that his
name would live forever. Soapbark acts as a foaming agent
in many fire extinguishers. Without his imprisonment
and brace of assistants, Raleigh wouldn't have produced
The History of the World, whose first book states the greatest
wonder of the earth is the palm tree. I have stood beneath
a tall one in L.A. and watched its full fronds seethe
like the mane of a lion. Diana's temple the way the Ephesian
workforce fixed it is remembered as one of the seven
wonders of antiquity, its chalk white blinding under chicory
blue Turkish skies. I hear the fingertips of history
thrum on tabletops in Roanoke and when popcorn bursts as it
spins in my microwave. When I open the bag opposite
my kitchen window, the night reflects my face back in at
me through the steam expressed from kernels to fascinate
its way back into the water cycle, in order to be the rain
that fed the sassafras we hid in before I had to be human.