Gail Wronsky

L

Light chaff and falling leaves or a pair of feathers

on the ground can spook a horse who won’ t flinch when faced
with a backhoe or a pack of Harleys. I call it “horse

ophthalmology,” because it is a different kind of system —
not celestial, necessarily, but vision in which the small,

the wispy, the lightly lifted or stirring threads of existence
excite more fear than louder and larger bodies do. It’ s Matthew

who said that the light of the body is the eye, and that if
the eye is healthy the whole body will be full of light. Maybe