For my uncle, a drink must be extravagant
pleasurable but not sentimental. There must be
a love for the gurgle of the bottle, a sound
for the click of neck & lip which sleeps for years
in the canals of his ears. There must be fire
down his throat. The tumbler must have nerve
despite the pain in his backbone, despite the leg
that goes off. As a child when he first learned
to form questions did the answers light up
the bottle pocketed in his father’s jacket.
On winter holidays when he got so lit my father
drove him home & most likely put him to bed.
I always knew he would come like this, outdrinking
everyone & no one lifting a finger to stop what then
meant nothing now means every lick of it. I love
to see the lines of his eyes curve when he savors
juniper berries like a good monk in a monastery. I love
to hear him say, you gat dat right, when he speaks
of my dead father. It is possible to make a phrase sound
so beautiful there’s a rhythm to it. From my uncle
I’ve learned so much I’ve got nothing on his father.
I could paint the notes for you, the madder
& amber color of a bottle in a Rembrandt painting.
Such a non sequitur, I must exaggerate to be exact.
All my lousy life I have fallen for it, this dark brew
personified. I can tell the answers by the way
the gin rises in a burst out of his throat. I mean it
like a clenching mourner, I’ve carried a flask.
Copyright © 2026 by William Archila. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on April 8, 2026, by the Academy of American Poets.