What the Seeing Think They See
As fragile as
it is, it’s glass that,
even though it
has the most
to lose being
broken
protects us the
most as we look
out during the
rise and decline
of our day to
day, hour by hour
(yes, for some,
the dying
or the about to be
born, say) second
by second
lives. How, as sun
rises above
this stand of river
pines or that
line of cove
spruce we watch
the water pull
herself up like
pants after a long
time off or if
not off at least below
the knee, the
spring life plea
purged (for
now) and the cuffs
like leg irons
chuff and rattle
as the sexed wander
off to meet
the tide and
try to beat it. Don’t we,
looking through
the glassed-in view
of our own lives,
corneas pupils
irises the broad sclera, feel
somewhat
apart from or even above
it
all, watching what comes and goes
without feeling
it on our cheek
or hearing the rut
and grunt and
don’t we look partly
away, piqued
all the while saying
not me, not
me? Who first,
and who can
say, is going to break
the glass? The watched or
the
watcher? Are the watched too?
in some way,
(maybe even sneakier
because of the fee) voyeurs,
giving
their thrust
their pent up sarcophagi
sweating ll for the audience?
I mean listen,
authenticity alone
is at
stake. We make the most
of our glass no
matter what side
of it we stand
on, even when some
anonymous bird,
shunted by the sun’s
glare, sees
nothing and at her best
possible speed
flies straight into a wall
of air breast
first and plunges
as far down as
the ground can go. And
having met so,
this glass spreads the way
webs spread
when a body just begins
to fall or be shoved through
them:
they stretch and hold on,
stretch
and hold. And the light
that falls
through, beginning at once to be
blotted by a coat
pocket or lip
is Noah on his boat,
dry land all
around, the immensity
of a blue too
much blue, way glass has
of keeping it, secretly, briefly, in the
gasses of the between