Sea Glass
A Passageway into History
Pat Hanbery
This sea glass [above] once belonged to a bottle containing a 19th-century elixir. Sarsaparilla purportedly cured a variety of conditions, such as boils, tumors, rheumatism, and syphilis. Doctors often recommended it as a tonic to be taken regularly because they believed it cleansed and purified the blood. A sample recipe included the dried roots of the smilax vine; alcohol; dandelion, yellow dock, or burdock roots; and prickly ash, birch, or sassafras bark. Modified versions of this formula are used today to flavor medicine and soft drinks.

Pat Hanbery
Some beachcombers call [green sea glass, like that to the right,] emeralds. Others think of them as the world's finest jade. Still another notion is deeply rooted in sea lore and perpetuated by writer and artist Mimi Carpenter in her book Of Lucky Pebbles and Mermaid's Tears. An excerpt:
On a beautiful island called Islesboro
Just below the edge of low tide,
Lived a mischievous Mermaid named Shorah
With the Sea Ugly Xyat by her side.
She was different from all of the others,
Wearing fins on her nose and her ears,
But the most remarkable things you would notice
Were her scales - and her soft green, glass tears.

Pat Hanbery
Excerpted from Sea Glass Chronicles: Whispers from the Past, by C.S. Lambert; published by Down East



