Dusk
By Sean Thomas Dougherty
Published 1 January 2021
Smokestack dusk dance, the swing shift from the metallurgy plant
smoking on break in the dusk, near the empty laundry mat
where I wash the dusk from my clothes, where the old women weave
the last strands of dusk with their fingers, Fate
fettered dusk, through the open doors of corner bars when men drink
their dusk on ice, raise em high in blue tinged light.
The gloaming the Irish call it, the time between, when the ghost riders
grieve the grail, when the open hearted
hear the hymns of those hands that held the light
and let it spill. My father at night, his glass of dusk, the work day dust
in the palm of his hand. My mother danced alone in the dusk,
in a corner room with red brick walls, with headphones on, spinning
with her arms outstretched, the dusk of regret like flashbulbs
never quite learned. Pocket dusk to turn out on the bureau before bed,
and the dusk falls across Chinatown, gathered in the jars of herbs,
ground tiger balls and rhino horn, the dusk of tusk toothed pachyderms,
of plumage like dusk, on hats behind glass in the textile museums,
bird song dusk. Down the block someone is cursing someone
out in the dusk, as if they cannot hear the light entering their bodies,
their limbs catching starlight, red-light, green light— the children run
reaching through the dusk. So much sadness in the dusk
of open windows where women lean over the flower potted ledges,
so much of what is sweet. Children eat the dusk
in long tongues of letters they scrawl in chalk
on the sidewalk. Cats meow and hiss the dusk, mew the dusk
as the lights of windows click on and the fireflies rise through the trees,
I fold my clothes as if my hands are praying, forgetting, praying
and forgetting for those people I love who live so distant from me,
whom the dusk has long set on, for whom the dusk is yet to come.
In between houses a radio plays, a tender pop song, a dog howls.
The dryer spins, as the men smoke in the near dark
outside the factory— now turning black blue,
like a dusk colored bruise on one’s forearm
where he dropped a piece of sheet metal, he blows his smoke,
the gravity of dusk, at the CITGO entering the Slurpee machine,
on the sneakers of boys who sit on the curb, sharpening a knife.
Dusk is the last paycheck. Our probation before night.