Lines Written on a Blank Space I lifted the sponge and touched the soap— would it be gone by September? It had been my closest companion, it knew me well, and I felt about it the same, though we never spoke and I did not know where it came from before I found it, all the while I was walking it sat in the dark room where white light came in through the lace curtains, and when I came back from my walk with the smell of wet, chopped wood being dragged over pine needles clinging to my clothes, my hair, it was there, only smaller, imperceptibly smaller, which is the way it was made to grow— by getting smaller— and if this be the point where soap begins, how can I say it will not keep growing after it goes away? I lifted the soap, I lifted my terrible arm and turned on the water.