Today’s poem is from Holding Patterns: physics & engineering poems, published by The Poets Union.
Tricia Dearborn
Everything we’re made of
comes from earth; we cry, returning
borrowed salt; we give our bone and muscle
back to the earth to suck, as ash,
as rotting flesh: that calcium atom in your skull —
star-fired, congealed to rock, dissolved
by rain, passed on to you, breathing blood
in your mother’s womb —
will settle in another’s bone some day
when your atoms range over mountains, rock
in the currents of distant oceans
no matter how steadfast, stock-still this life,
one day you will travel the world