Sunday Visit

We finally found him

curled up in the chair like a many-wrinkled shell

staring blindly out at nothing

among a gathering of imbecilic fossils

his one good eye fastening fiercely onto life

the hair still sturdy though silver under the old cloth cap.

 

We finally found him

through all that terrible labyrinth of grey concrete cells

quietly rounding out his days

alone in a morass of moronic camaraderie

his doomed cellmates snoozing and snoring all around

and he with his one good eye defying the shadows.

 

The tears came then

not soft, but real

the tears of a real man broken by life

groping wildly with gnarled fingers at the straws of life

in that awful room of no life

and the television set blaring forth its banalities

drowning whatever words of comfort our futile tongues could offer.

 

I had no words for him

no words to span the heartbreak of years

when Samson-like he had stood between us and chaos

bringing to us the small rare trinkets of his love.

I had for him only whiskey

the old bitter gift

the poor tribute of one poorer in spirit

than that jaded near-blind half-deaf soul reclining so tamely

in a wicker chair

in a ward of fearful paralysing resignation

a ward full of already dead people

sleeping as the television blared.

 

Yet the hand that gripped mine spelled out love

and the raw lovely courage of that old landscaped face

put my feeble pity to shame.

Christy Brown


Christy Brown (1932-1981), the author of My Left Foot, had an athenoid variety of cerebral palsy.

What do you think the author may be implying about the nature of pity?

How does pity differ from empathy? How does this provide a key for disability awareness?

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