It is a workaday task Performed in the service of equally workaday people: A bland smile, a benign greeting, The quick review of hastily taken skeletal notes, The fixing of the apparatus, an approximation of eyewear Fit for some black-and-white-serial robot, Upon sundry bridges of sundry noses, And thence the reading of letters, Done with an easy sure-footedness at first, Then imperceptibly yet inexorably more hesitant Until such time they are no long able To decipher what is before them, The shapes devoid of meaning, Hopelessly beyond their ken, And at such a time he begins to finagle lenses and settings, Until such a time where the occupant of his chair Regains equilibrium and pronounces his sight Sufficient to the task at hand, But there was one occasion when, inexplicably, The patient stiffened in abject terror, Relating in clipped, anguished words That all he saw was light, nothing but light Subsuming everything in its presence. He was able to restore the lenses to such a fashion Where the figures before him were reasonably familiar, But as he excused the patient from the chair, He found himself wishing ruefully That he knew some grinder, some technician Who could have fashioned eyewear To the specifications which had elicited such a reaction.