Light chaff and falling leaves or a pair of feathers
By Gail Wronsky
on the ground can spook a horse who won’t flinch when faced 
with a backhoe or a pack of Harleys. I call it “horse
ophthalmology,” because it is a different kind of system—
not celestial, necessarily, but vision in which the small,
the wispy, the lightly lifted or stirring threads of existence
excite more fear than louder and larger bodies do. It’s Matthew
who said that the light of the body is the eye, and that if
the eye is healthy the whole body will be full of light. Maybe
in this case “light” can also mean “lightness.” With my eyes of
corrupted and corruptible flesh I’m afraid I see mostly darkness
by which I mean heaviness. How great is that darkness? Not 
as great as the inner weightlessness of horses whose eyes perceive, 
correctly I believe, the threat of annihilation in every windblown 
dust mote of malignant life. All these years I’ve been watching 
out warily in obvious places (in bars, in wars, in night cities and
nightmares, on furious seas). Yet what’s been trying to destroy 
me has lain hidden inside friendly-seeming breezes, behind 
soft music, beneath the carpet of small things one can barely see. 
The eye is also a lamp, says Matthew, a giver of light, bestower 
of incandescent honey, which I will pour more cautiously 
over the courses I travel from now on. What’s that whisper? 
Just the delicate sweeping away of somebody’s life.
Source: Poetry (October 2012)


