Eye
by Leila Abeni Jackson
Seriously, though, something should be said
About how easy it is, making the space between us
Into no space. About how hard we work
For that ease. The seamless semicircles we join
Our bellies for, like (or so they say) what you’d see
If the Earth had rings: a graceless silver arching,
A backbend west. What might be taken for granted,
Then? Most likely, the same things: color, light,
Darkness, stars. There is a point at which
Cones crowd out rods and pour color into orbit,
Or in other words, we can see pigment even if
There is no light. We try to keep some mystery
Alive, but surely you know something of us now,
How we travel signal to signal to signal, how we
Head the body without bodies ourselves. And, yes,
Retinal disparity, how we turn space into no space
By convincing you there was never any there at all.
Leila Abeni Jackson is a proud DC native and a Pushcart-nominated Harvard undergraduate studying English and History of Science. Her work appears in the Harvard Advocate, Rattle, Sixteen Rivers Press, and elsewhere. She is the former poetry editor of the Harvard Advocate and her most recent work includes her senior thesis, Uncharted Song, a poetry collection which explores Blackness and the medical body through time.
