From my childhood I recall the Catholic Ash Wednesday ritual in which the priest makes the sign of the cross on your forehead while intoning, "Remember that you are dust, and to dust you will return." This poem by Danusha Laméris thinks about the ubiquity and permanence of dust.
Dust
by Danusha Laméris
It covers everything, fine powder,
the earth’s gold breath falling softly
on the dark wood dresser, blue ceramic bowls,
picture frames on the wall. It wafts up
from canyons, carried on the wind,
on the wings of birds, in the rough fur of animals
as they rise from the ground. Sometimes it’s copper,
sometimes dark as ink. In great storms,
it even crosses the sea. Once
when my grandmother was a girl,
a strong gale lifted red dust from Africa
and took it thousands of miles away
to the Caribbean where people swept it
from their doorsteps, kept it in small jars,
reminder of that other home.
Gandhi said, “The seeker after truth
should be humbler than the dust.”
Wherever we go, it follows.
I take a damp cloth, swipe the windowsills,
the lamp’s taut shade, run a finger
over the dining room table.
And still, it returns, settling in the gaps
between the floorboards, gilding the edges
of unread books. What could be more loyal,
more lonely, and unsung?
Have a good day and enjoy the rest of your weekend. Put off the dusting until tomorrow.
More thoughts coming.
Bilbo
2 comments:
I dusted once. It came back. Fool me once...
i like this one a lot. Thanks!
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