• Poems

    Daniel Mask: “Made of glass”

    Daniel Mask

    Made of glass

    Looking up with my head back
    to the steel-blue sky.
    —A voice.
    Mumbling echoes—
    even music now, a circus of strangers
    milling like ants—below.
    Against the wind’s velocity,
    I heard myself speak
    as if someone were listening.
    When I was young, this building was taller,
    or so it seemed.
    Made of glass,
    a few broken windows,
    except the top floor—
    the netting gone.
    For a while this structure stood empty,
    abandoned.
    It felt misplaced in time,
    forgotten before it aged.
    I never thought I would be back up here
    where the ledge still holds weight
    and nothing is asked of me.

    The building’s shadow drifts harsh
    in the open window—
    A voice folded outside, half-heard,
    then heard again differently.
    For a moment I leaned forward.
    I lost my footing. The crowd gasps.
    I was already elsewhere.
    The air tasted like fried oysters—
    the way I remember the beach.
    On the top floor, back when, a barbershop
    with a view of the sunset over the fishing pier.
    From the barber’s chair, I noticed how
    everything paused.
    The voice returns in fixed fragments, caught
    —over my shoulder half-remembered.
    I lean further, not knowing why,
    into the space between us.
    The crowd shifts.
    I smell the salt—the same salt

    from the beach below the barbershop,
    a bull horn blares with a gull’s cry,
    —folding into the evening.

     

    Daniel Mask has poems and a photograph published in Rattle, Gyroscope, Red Cedar Review, Tulane Review and an
    essay in 30 West. He has a Master’s degree from the University of Houston and is a returned Peace Corps Volunteer. His work shares a preoccupation with being a witness to what humans hold sacred—and how that burden, often unrecognized, is processed, concealed or transformed. He finds it does not come from transcendence or resolution but from endurance.