Poetry |

“Dad and the Eye Exam” & “Milk Run”

Dad and the Eye Exam

 

 

My chin rests in this little sling

and I let you come back from the dead.

 

Go ahead, sit by the magazine rack

as the optometrist taps our history

 

into the record. Your torn retina,

my macular degeneration.

 

As I lean back, dilating drops blur nature

from nurture, kidney stones

 

and cholesterol. Between you and I

what other maladies are undiagnosed?

 

My eyes are moist cradled in precision.

I outnumber your years. A few degrees.

 

The cylinder turns in the refractor.

Which lens is better, one or two?

 

This, or the other. A calibrated peekaboo.

You were there, then you were not.

 

So I bring you back. Let you see

the apple more dim, beneath the tree.

 

Uncompromising light scours

left. Right. We wait in the bloom

 

blindness leaves behind.

When it retreats, you go

 

and I blink, and work

to make out the letters.

 

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

 

Milk Run

 

 

4 am and the half-light beyond

the window knows

I have not slept.

 

Our bed is aglow from the abandoned

game on the tablet. And my wife

she is a light sleeper.

 

But my stirrings have not yet broken

her rest. The blue hour

drapes our bodies

 

makes us seem slight in this room, in this

world. I watch our ribs rise

and fall.

 

In two hours, I will grind coffee, press boil on the pot.

Do what the calendar says should be done.

A hundred years ago

 

my grandfather was a boy who rose early

to deliver milk with an old horse

that knew the route.

 

Hooves clopped, cart wheels whined

the gaits of work on the street.

When the horse stopped

 

my grandfather pulled a bottle

from the crate, and ran

to place it on the stoop.

Contributor
Seth Rosenbloom
Seth Rosenbloom’s poetry has recently appeared in UCity Review, Ilanot Review, River Heron Review, Midway Journal, Cutbank on-line, ONE ART, and other publications. He consults with companies on leadership and management, and resides in Seattle.
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