精華區beta poetry 關於我們 聯絡資訊
Sorting Laundry Elisavietta Ritchie Folding clothes, I think of folding you into my life. Our king sized sheets like table cloths for the banquets of giants, pillow cases, despite so many washings seams still holding our dreams. Towels patterned orange and green, flowered pink and lavender, gaudy, bought on sale, reserved, we said, for the beach, refusing, even after years, to bleach into respectability. So many shirts and skirts and pants recycling week after week, head over heels recapitulating themselves. All those wrinkles to be smoothed, or else ignored, they're in style. Myriad uncoupled socks which went paired into the foam like those creatures in the ark. And what's shrunk is tough to discard even for Goodwill. In pockets, surprises: forgotten matches, lost screws clinking on enamel; paper clips, whatever they held between shiny jaws, now dissolved or clogging the drain; well washed dollars, legal tender for all debts public and private, intact despite agitation; and, gleaming in the maelstrom, one bright dime, broken necklace of good gold you brought from Kuwait, the strangely tailored shirt left by a former lover... If you were to leave me, if I were to fold only my own clothes, the convexes and concaves of my blouses, panties, stockings, bras turned upon themselves, a mountain of unsorted wash could not fill the empty side of the bed. -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc) ◆ From: 140.112.194.17