"Weapon Salve"
Click the arrow on the audio player to hear Charles Harper Webb read this poem. You can also download the recording or subscribe to Slate's Poetry Podcast on iTunes.
Rather than swab out wounds black 
with gangrene, learning how shoulders look
deprived of arms, and the way maces interact 
with heads, the medieval doctor might 
choose to medicate what caused the injury.  
How much more pleasant than screams
and groans, thrashing and pleas, to settle
some patient sword on a soft bed, anointing 
its silver length, its jeweled forehead.
Spared daily bleedings, and the unguents 
of rat pellets and fermented chicken blood 
that were state-of-the-art pharmaceuticals, 
sometimes a wounded knight would heal.  
In the dark infirmary, out of earshot of the court, 
sometimes the bloody stump would mend, 
the smashed thigh, knit; the septic fever, break; 
and the knight, limp downstairs to his old 
place at the feast.  Then everyone would give 
the doctor—already paid a lump of gold 
big as a unicorn's heart—three cheers, 
which I suggest you give for your lost love.  
Don't pain yourself, picturing all we do.  
If I'm the sword that laid you low, every caress 
and loving word she gives to me, heals you.
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