Monday, June 6, 2011

Papa, Can You See Me?


Belgium, 1945, borrowed from Life.

Papa, Can You See Me?

Papa, can you see me
as light rays strike the corneal windshield,
becoming an old man too,
entering gently the anterior chamber,
plunging affectionately through the clear aqueous,
yes alone, but far from lonely,
penetrating the hazel iris
as the pupil recalls and dilates, snapping
like a nikon shutter, do I look
like you did racing deep into the convex city
of the crystalline lens, narrowing the focus
to a molten spearhead of data, are my hands
large like yours, shoulders as broad,
chest as hirsute, churning midst the turgid
viscosity of vitreous like a jet boat
aimed as bullet toward the bull’s eye
of foveal indentation, the majestic macula,
did you ever notice the astonishing strength
in my young arms, were you a little proud
of the intellect you assisted in nurturing,
bathing the cones in royal radiance,
vibrating into colors recognized, pounding,
pulsating over the retinal vastness
like an F5 windstorm, stimulating
the great transducer to convert
the edgy rawness into clean neural impulses,
that Navajo mystery code, did you attend
all three of my college graduations, watch me
swing a broadsword as MacDuff, or reaching
out to thousands of my blind brothers
that raced incredibly down the salt flats
of the optic nerve aqueduct powerfully,
like my ’68 Impala ragtop Super Sport
with the 396 roaring and the top down,
screeching hotly into the Gestalt Station
anchored within the occipital foothills
of perception, where every moment you missed
is cataloged, saved, treasured, waiting
for your gaze, for even though
we seemed to have passed by each other
in this lifetime, too densely immersed
faceless in those train stations with separate
destinations, still, Papa,
I am beginning to see some of you
in my morning mirror, and that
will have to be enough,
this time.

Glenn Buttkus

June 2011


Listed as #29 over on Magpie Tales 68

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11 comments:

Tess Kincaid said...

Powerful and poignant write, Glenn. I felt like I was riding a jet boat through the gel tissue of a giant eyeball. "...recalls and dilates, snapping like a nikon shutter" is wonderful.

Jannie Funster said...

Among your best. Deep deep. Deep.

I bet he did cheer you on as McDuff!

Xxoo Jannie

Alex Shapiro said...

VERY touching, Glenn...

Other Mary said...

How poignant. Love the closing lines especially.

Brigid O'Connor said...

A really touching read. How true we start seeing their faces in our mirrors, a lovely Magpie.

Kathe W. said...

this is such a wonderful piece- especially the last as you see your father in the morning mirror

Windowlad said...

...there's a fervent feeling of sadness within those lines... that deeply touches my soul inside... fantastic write.

Good day.

~Kelvin

Ursula White said...

This is fantastic, a riff like no other, a poem, a feast of words.
Thank you so much for sending it to me.

Everybody else's meagre effort pales in comparison.

Greetings

Friko

Ann Grenier said...

Fabulous poem Glenn! Your intelligent journey through the parts of the eye, camera, gun site and bulls eye is so rich, such a pleasure to read and listen to. I loved your final look into the glass eye of the mirror. Great poem!

Anonymous said...

This is truly stunning your vocabulary is incredible. Are you published? This is deeply moving wonderful job

Steve Isaak said...

Good write.