Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Alice Flecha: Madam Death

In Brazil, Death is female.

Madam Death wears a black cloak
the hood of which she always wears (even at the beach).
Like Mr. Stork, her competitor, she is timeless
and takes well-deserved pride
in always getting her man
for no one can escape her or her List
however hard they try.

Madam Death is not unfeeling
but she must do her thankless job
day in and day out
she chases, cajoles, traps and tricks
she always gets her man
doing the job no one wants—
someone has to, after all.

Madam Death is capable of great compassion,
but dying is a side-effect of living;
some evade her for years
some meet her far too early
but sooner or later she will always get her man.

Madam Death is aware of the injustice of it all;
but her List is not hers to control,
and once in it, your future is set.

In Brazil it is understood
that it’s natural to dislike her;
she takes away our loved ones,
sends us into the unknown;
when angered, we are told, her wrath is great:
even her godson was not spared
for trying to cheat her,
or so the story goes.

Yet Madam Death is not evil,
nor does she want our fear—
all she asks for is respect.

That is why
we often give her a rarely-used honorific
usually saved for the elderly.

That is why beneath her cloak
the hood of which she always wears (even at the beach)
she is a skeleton, her face a grinning skull
eery and unnerving, 
yet oddly funny
for Madam Death without her hood  
is like a werewolf wearing a cone of shame.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Cool poem. I really like the repetition of "she always gets her man" because it reflects the ruthless nature of death. I also like the subtle humour of "even at the beach", but the boldly comedic and absurd tone of the final line seems to belong to a different poem.

Unknown said...

On second thought that last line might fit in better than I first thought.