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      March 23, 2025Night VisionJed Myers

      Our minds’ eyes can be keen. I hear
      the young doctor in Gaza City tell me
      through the car radio what she’s seen,
       
      and I see, too, a man with arms snug
      around a lifeless child. The doc asks
      the man if he knows his little one’s dead
       
      and I recognize his frozen wince, reflex
      ancient and new, resistance to what is
      not yet allowed to be true. Doc speaks
       
      the scene of children’s bodies obscuring
      the floor. There, can you see it now?
      And the grimacing girl, an arm hanging
       
      odd—bone pokes through the skin
      like a stiff finger pointing at all this
      torn by a claw of sky—she shivers
       
      a chill of despair, her mother’s nowhere
      and the doctor herself progressively
      numb. Can you see our physician
       
      pursing her lips, eyebrows set firm,
      forehead uncreased? So she’ll hide
      her overwhelm from us, as she must
       
      decide who in the room might be kept
      alive. Not these with no evident wounds
      whose hemorrhages can’t be sewn, lungs
       
      and spleens shock-blown in unopened
      envelopes. Those under their homes?
      They don’t arrive. The doctor will tend
       
      too few, shift end, and in bed her nerves
      spark the night. Hearts’ eyes, sharp
      in the dark, no device. I’ve parked
       
      out front, engine and radio off—yes,
      this other light threads the earth.
       

      from Poets Respond

      Jed Myers

      “Listening on my car radio to a doctor overwhelmed by new casualties in her Gaza City hospital, I felt a hint of the moment in that remote place, as if it were not far at all. And of course it isn’t! But we’ll always need to tune in, not out, to know it. My poem posits the light by which we can see through apparent distances.”