Communist Cremation in Prague, 1986
by Richard Hacken

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Communist Cremation in Prague, 1986

Up from the subway exit escalate
Miléna Bilchek and her children.
Streetcar Number Eight, spitting sparks,
chortles to a stop.
Black as Bohemian coal,
a taxi sticks
half into the boulevard.

                        A butcher truck shrills its horn.

Separating asphalt from marble,
the cemetery wall extends, grey and soot,
to Wenceslas Square,
except where broken
by a bough of poplar
or a person.

                        A fiddler is leaning against the wall.

At the cobbled courtyard,
a flower girl droops with soberness,
addresses a wreath
to somebody's uncle in a stiff suit.
"Józef," it will speak.

                        This she does for a living.

Blue decorated military,
tracing cobbles with their toes,
mingle with white women
in black hose.

                        They wait their turn.

A Westerner
in Nike shoes
hides chocolate between his teeth.

                        The taste is bitter sweet.

From the crematorium
drains a flow of mourners.

                        The hall is empty.

                        It is finished.

                        There is no smell.

A chime sounds,
then the word: "Bilchek."

                        It is time.

Men strong and alive
enter the hall, touching
women strong and alive.

                        A comrade tells who Bilchek was.

The Slavic brotherhood and sisters
take effort
to stand within their shoes
and feel the "Internationale."

                        The air has heft; the organ has power.

A curtain draws
gently between the lives
of civil servants
and the waiting
fire.

                        Holocaust of Józef Bilchek ignites.

The family stumbles into the open air
as a column of Bohemian soot rises.
Patches of random sky begin
to pull the carbon apart:
less black, more blue,
cleared by the wind.

                        The smoke is gone.

To transport persons,
a taxi sticks
half into the boulevard.
Number Eight streetcar pauses
For one more passenger.
Down to darkness
the subway entrance rolls.

                        Miléna Bilchek wipes her cheek.



                          - Richard Hacken



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