The stark paper-white
of a building’s backside
occupied the only view
he had of the world.
It blinded him
on sunlit July afternoons.
Its slow piercing sharpness
started after they brought his lunch
as it burned
at his detached soul
and retinas
until the early evening news.
They would converge then
upon him
with clipboards and bottles
and their starched whites
and shoe squeaks followed by
a stained alabaster
compartmented tray that
separated his food
so no puree would invade
the mashed, blenderized meat
The chronological conspiracy
left him trembling
and soiling white linens
and latex
No visitors
No conversations
only the vast flatness of TV land
with its boring flesh
and repeated declarations
as the hall light
began to shadow his room
in a diffused
emotionless vacuum.
He waited and watched
as the view softened,
as a woman, her
hand extended,
and a gentle moon rose above
the wall that separated
him from everything.