There
was a time it balanced, black and white,
at
the edge of my dresser. My first television,
my
secret sharer, my conduit to art and darkness.
A
perfect globe, all glitz and seventies kitsch.
A
techno helmet too like the astronauts’ I adored.
In
it, I watched everything that matter. Planet
of
the Apes, Trog, Beast from 20,00 Fathoms.
So
many large and small screen heroes, so many
monsters,
all unsettled from the deep. Space
time,
sea. But one night it was Kong, king
of
them all. That night, long before the divorce,
before
the screaming, before the Alzheimer’s,
dementia,
talk of retirement homes, before poems
about
his anger, before poems about my anger,
before
poems about how he could have gone
to
the moon, after pilot, after Air Force, after all
he’d
wanted had begun, already, to fade the way
it
has now, amongst only the beginnings of the ruin
of
a man I called my father, my father sat with me
to
watch. I rarely saw what I was supposed to see
when
someone watched beside me. More often,
I
watched them, their reactions, and that night,
one
of the last we had together in that house,
I
couldn’t tell if he was seeing my crystal sphere,
the
TV itself, or the ape aped within, the lonely
beast
contemplating his kingdom from his tower,
this
strange new world where the plane was coming,
coming
from some unimaginable future, coming
to
knock him down before the curtain.