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Gabriel Gudding

Poem About My Strabismus


— for Robert Duncan


If eyes are the windows of the soul, mine are bay windows.
Sometimes my eyeballs begin clubbing each other with paddles.
When the adults told me as a child to look both ways before I crossed the road
I could do it without turning my head.

I think I am crosseyed because my eyeballs are trying to see up my nose’s skirt.
But with my fingers I have lifted up the flap of either nostril
to show my eyes there is no vulva in my nares. A porpoise swam by

and my right eyeball punched it in the blowhole.

I saw the dog running from me
and my left eyeball gave it a good slug in the rectum.

It is a gruesome memory to recall my very sight being flung at a beagle’s end.

Eyeballs may be the gonads of one’s forehead —
Why else do we say “eye balls” unless “testicles of the face”?

When will my head fly off my body?
                  When my sight-wings untangle
You will see it out there in the field
eating acorns
and shitting oaks from the throat.



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Copyright Notice: Please respect the fact that this material is copyright.
It is made available here without charge for personal use only. It may not be
stored, displayed, published, reproduced, or used for any other purpose

‘Poem About My Strabismus’ is from A Defense of Poetry, by Gabriel Gudding, © 2002.
All rights controlled by the University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh, PA 15261.
Used by permission of the University of Pittsburg Press.

This appearance of the material is also copyright © Gabriel Gudding and Jacket magazine 2004
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