-âBeauty has a strangenessâ– Linda Gregg, from her poem, âFragmentsâ
Mottled, veins afloat, shadows flicker, the lid dips, and resists, pupil presses outward, barricaded by flecks and flashes. Thin film, refracts. Blink. At night, involuntarily tears scour from all corners. Lambent lights, glow, gleamâand blink. Blink. Fight the darkness, its allure, and then only darkness. Except, you discern him: the contours of him, the roundness of his face, the slopes of his shoulders and back, the beauty-mark trail of moles descending from his neck, which fingers find and patter down. Sight is not always needed. And in the morning-light, even if heâs already in the mists of showering and shaving and humming, the radio on, the news on, the top of the hour sonorously announced by National Public Radio, the spike of deodorant and mouthwash, and even if you are caught on the wrong side of the looking-glass, groping for what remains of vision, he is near. Blink. Blink. Blink. He doesnât like to be looked at in the mornings like this: toweled and brutish. Stripped down to bones and ambition. âBeauty has a strangeness,â said the poem. Ambition has more strangeness: stealth until it is not, light until dark. At the mirror, he doesnât realize you arenât looking, that you can no longer see him. You are blind, at this moment.