Saints’ Logic
Love the drill, confound the dentist.
 Love the fever that carries me home.
 Meat of exile. Salt of grief.
 This much, indifferent
 affliction might yield. But how
 when the table is God’s own board
 and grace must be said in company?
 If hatred were honey, as even
 the psalmist persuaded himself,
 then Agatha might be holding
 her breasts on the plate for reproach.
 The plate is decidedly
 ornamental, and who shall say that pity’s
 not, at this remove? Her gown
 would be stiff with embroidery whatever
 the shape of the body beneath.
 Perhaps in heaven God can’t hide
 his face. So the wounded
 are given these gowns to wear
 and duties that teach them the leverage
 of pain. Agatha listens with special
 regard to the barren, the dry,
 to those with tumors where milk
 should be, to those who nurse
 for hire. Let me swell,
 let me not swell. Remember the child,
 how its fingers go blind as it sucks.
 Bartholomew, flayed, intervenes
 for the tanners. Catherine for millers,
 whose wheels are of stone. Sebastian
 protects the arrowsmiths, and John
 the chandlers, because he was boiled
 in oil. We borrow our light
 where we can, here’s begging the pardon
 of tallow and wick. And if, as we’ve tried
 to extract from the prospect, we’ll each
 have a sign to be known by at last—
 a knife, a floursack, a hammer, a pot—
 the saints can stay,
 the earth won’t entirely have given us up.
Copyright Credit: Linda Gregerson, “Saints’ Logic” from The Woman Who Died in Her Sleep. Copyright © 1996 by Linda Gregerson. Reprinted with the permission of Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Source: The Woman Who Died in her Sleep (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1996)


