Maybe the bed lies about the garden, Seeing it from a one-eyed supine pose. The garden, ***** by winter, stands naked Outside the window, looking in. The bed is comfortable, complacent; It doesn’t much care about ragged orphans Or abused women. Perhaps it should remember it’s made of wood, Same as the trees, though it’s covered with A springy mattress, happy sheets, cottony quilts. The garden has known spring abundance And will know it again. The bed has known Nightmares, sickness and may even learn About death. In summer the bed will be stripped, The garden dressed in luscious fragments Of leaf and petal, hung in perfect equilibrium. The bed and the garden, like body and soul, Each needs to remember their debt to the other.