The Dust of Elephantine
Khnum the creator
Still waits at his wheel
Heket still inhales deeply
Preparing her breath of life
The clay figures no longer created
There is no need for their services in
Today’s world.
Or so it seems
The clay has dried here now
At the temple of Elephantine.
Forgotten and turned to dust
Ruins and rubble
Who now feeds the God in remembrance
Who brings the fresh wine or beer
The offerings of dates and honey.
Like time itself
Khnum is everywhere in this space.
His whispers still hang in the Nile Wind
In all directions
This place, now abandoned except
By diggers and seekers
Sherds of pottery and granite
The discards of a broken humanity.
Hoping to be pieced back togetherWaiting to be reborn
Nobody wants the pottery
Chunks of earth, left in the sand and sunlight
Black slip, red clay
Malachite inlays in
Simple etchings
Grooves and lips
Sharps and flats
Dozens of centuries tossed aside
Discarded melodies
From a long forgotten song.
What is exciting about daily life, after all?
Perhaps a mummified monkey or
Hathor headed amulet, or dare I say
Something that glimmers of gold.
To me, the treasure lies in
A broken sherd bearing still
The thumbprint of the man or woman
Who shaped it
A billion breaths ago.
Oh Khnum, you understand
Here, blessed by the waters of Hapi
Here where the tears of Isis were collected
Here in the layers of mud and blood and bone
Here the sherds, like souls
Sandwiched between layers of earth and straw
Here I whisper your name to the wind
Here I offer dates and honey
Here amidst the broken ways of man
Scattered and ignored
we are elementals
Made of earth, air, fire and water
Like the pottery, broken and disregarded
Forgotten to function
Will our bones, too, be forgotten to time.
A new day begins to form
Khnum, enticed, sits at his wheel
With his left foot he pushes the tired kickstone
The wheel begins to turn
Slowly at first, and then…
He gathers the earth and water
The clay forms cells that grow and multiply
Forged with fire.
Lungs ready to be filled with Heket’s breath.
With a farewell and a prayer,
I leave the temple, and then the island
Returning to the water
Floating silently through the Aswan
My eye catches sight of a sheep
On a steep rocky shore
He stops a moment and gazes at me
Before he continues his climb.
Khnum is pleased