Old men in dresses wave hands across baskets casting magic spells on sausage and oranges then hocus pocus over horseradish root as thick as a forearm, potato-peeled later we'll garnish meats with mystical power.
They expect us to kiss the ****** feet of a God immortalized in plaster while granite saints stand watching a procession of misty-eyed martyrs shuffling down the aisle like sheep, and all the while the bells are ringing.
Always the ringing of bells.
Bells rung by boys standing still ring like angels.
The old men hold crackers up to the light, then more bells and drinking of blood and finally its done. They waddle down the nave casting incense in a metronome spray.
The boys follow behind the hypnotic smoke, their bells have been put away, pall bearers of the crucified Christ they lead us not into temptation, rather deliver us out the doors and into the street, redeemed and safe behind the hedge of numbing ritual.
JK November 2010
Memories of growing up Roman Catholic. My grandmother believed in having the priests "bless" food at Easter. I always found that a bit odd...