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Spring cleaning in Baltimore always involved a yellow bucket sloshing with soapy water
and a rag recognized as the tattered remains of my father's bowling shirt, circa 1973.
I would be sent to the front of the house on the first warm day of shorts
and no socks to wipe the marble steps. It was also springtime, I would learn years later,
when Michelangelo would visit Carrara and lay his head on recently quarried blocks. I wiped away
city grime, crushed berries, the dried paste of bird mess. The stonecutters claim he listened
for cobwebbed whispers, ran his thick fingers over mineral veins swirled within rock. I was
always amazed at how the marble would hold the imprint of a leaf dropped in autumn and pressed
into a smudge by a winter of rain. If the tale is true and the statues did indeed call out to be released
from their stone, imagine the Florentine walking down East Pratt Street, hundreds of fat cherubs
trapped in the stoops, crying out to the Master as we sit on their heads, resting cans of beer on their rumps.
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