MARGARET GIBSON


Passage

Image

Once in sunlight I pinned to the clothesline a cotton sheet, a plane of light

sheer as the mind of God,

before we imagined that mind creased by a single word.

With my hand I smoothed any rivel, any shirr, any suggestion of pleat or furrow.

Whatever it was I wanted from that moment, I can’t say. It failed to edify.

Nor did I bow.

And yet the memory holds, and there is a joy that recurs in me much as the scent

of summer abides in air dried sheets I unfold long after,

lying down in them as one might in a meadow,

as one might with a lover, as one might court the Infinite, however long it takes.

from The Southern Review