Grief Puppet

In the nearby plaza, musicians would often gather.
The eternal flame was fueled by propane tank.
An old man sold chive dumplings from a rolling cart,
while another grilled skewers of paprika beef.
Male turtledoves would puff their breasts, woo-ing, 
and for a few coins, we each bought an hour with 
the grief puppet. It had two eyes, enough teeth, 
a black tangle of something like hair or fur,
a flexible spine that ran the length of your arm.
Flick your wrist, and at the end of long rods
it raised its hands as if conducting the weather.
Tilt the other wrist, and it nodded. No effort
was ever lost on its waiting face. It never 
needed a nap or was too hungry to think straight.
You could have your conversation over and over,
past dusk when old men doused their charcoal,
into rising day when they warmed their skillets.
The puppet only asked what we could answer.
Some towns had their wall, others their well; 
we never gave the stupid thing a name, nor
asked the name of the woman who took our coins.
But later, we could all remember that dank felt,
and how the last of grief’s flock lifted from our chests.
Credit

Copyright © 2014 by Sandra Beasley. Used with permission of the author. This poem appeared in Poem-a-Day on April 28, 2014.

About this Poem

“In 2001, Queen Elizabeth II said, ‘Grief is the price we pay for love.’ This poem is part of a collection forthcoming in 2015 from W. W. Norton.”
—Sandra Beasley