Life’s dust


I have begun to gather life’s dust:
it’s not really visible, yet, but I can
feel it when I touch myself—the texture
of my flesh’s longing is somehow altered,
occluded by a granular sensation, the 
dry grit of all the years of frustration;
it is not yet enough to chafe and make me sore
but a small discomfort nags each time I
(or some patient, habitual lover) run(s)
a hopeful finger over back or chest or thigh…
I still think it best to ignore such evidence,
to let clear memories of times long before
replace the present patina of regret.
The truth is (and I still believe in truth!)
that my long dry season has caused life’s
dust to bloom everywhere; I can still
ignore it on my outer surfaces, but I worry
that deep inside—in belly’s churning bowl, in 
each lung-pumped puff of breath, or like
a light shroud on my hopeless heart—lies
that same dust of life, covering, contaminating all…
and why do I feel that there is someone, 
somewhere, who can wash me with a single
tear or breathe sharply on me the gust 
that will blow me back to love and wonder—
and life without dust?

Mark McWatt was born in Guyana and lives in Barbados.  He has published widely on aspects of Caribbean Literature and is joint editor of the Oxford Book of Caribbean Verse (2004).  His most recent poetry collection is The Journey to Le Repentir (2009).  He is also the author of the award-winning story collection Suspended Sentences (2005).  This poem appears in The Journey to Le Repentir.