Procession

Procession

A Poem by Cassidy Mask

The music came first

Soft and sweet, but building

To an unbearable intensity

A sadness that was real.

Grief that meant something

(Not like the TV kind)

These were not entertainment tears.

 

I watched from my window

Stretching up on tiptoes

Perversely curious

To catch a glimpse,

An echoed fragment of the death.

 

The hearse, a dull van

With big windows,

Was strung with bright,

Gaudy flowers.

I wondered, idly,

If these hid the reek of death.

Or if it was something

Too far beyond a mere smell

To be hidden.

 

Death seemed to pad silently

Behind the lurching mourners

As if he too

Were more curious than

He cared to admit.

 

I looked up,

Momentarily surprised

By the other faces

Visible at windows.

Heads hanging out to catch

A glimpse.

(That curiosity again.)

 

I wondered

Were these people like me?

Outside the reach of that pain.

Bystanders. Witnesses to grief only.

As I looked into lined faces

I realized that no,

Not all of us watched

With passive interest.

 

The coffin disappeared,

Vanished from my line of sight,

Though for all I knew

It was gone forever.

The bereaved, with shaking shoulders

Seemed lost now their object

Had been removed.

 

I did not stay to watch

Them disperse.

I knew too little of

The pain that would be

Engulfing them.

 

I knew little of grief

But I didn’t want to see

Their broken faces,

Bright tormented eyes.

 

I turned away.

I did not want to share

Their pain.

 

One day, I knew,

I would have enough of my own.

And I decided then -

I would face it alone.

 

 

(I would follow no procession.)

© 2011 Cassidy Mask


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Added on January 14, 2011
Last Updated on January 14, 2011

Author

Cassidy Mask
Cassidy Mask

Singapore



About
I'm at art college in Singapore. "...I never heard them laugh. They had, Instead, this tic of scratching quotes in air - like frightened mimes inside their box of style, that first class carriag.. more..

Writing
Stare. Stare.

A Poem by Cassidy Mask