I dream in broadcloth, slumber in the starched infinity of things unseen; I rely on the coarse, unlaundered indifference of night. I go to the stars' brief grave in gratitude and rest upon their cases dressed in silk; their sands sift through the face of my grainy pillow. I must wear sackcloth like a sleeping saint, let it cover me in an airy shroud. The remnants of eternity must seep like dust into my skin's soft summary; I must agree to not care at all for dawn's quilted rhapsody of light.— Mary Rudbeck Stanko