His friend Martha's making soup, because you still
 have to eat. Meanwhile, back in the Garden
cave, the same Garden where he prayed to let
 this cup pass from him, he comes to himself lying
on a stone shelf in the cool dark, all 200 pounds
 of him, only changed. Minus mass, maybe,
or impervious to gravity. He doesn't understand this
 as a physics problem. He lifts his hand and stares
at it. In town Martha's trying to keep her tears out
 of the soup. The cabbage offers her its tough pale green
handles to steady her wobble. She strips its layers
 down to the heart, while Jesus -- whoo-ee! His astonished face,
chisel it in marble! -- lasers through the swaddling
 grave clothes. Heaven’s volatile physics draws him up.
In the deepest dark of winter when I hold a cabbage,
 peel off its outer leaves, before I plunge the knife in,
I think when I take that kind of journey,
 I might light my path with this green moon.
Jeanne Murray Walker lives in Philadelphia and teaches at the University of Delaware. Her newest book is New Tracks, Night Falling.
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