Ken Kirkby, A Painter’s Quest for Canada

excerpt

“Do you like it there?”
“No. It’s not where my heart wants to be but it is where I have to be.”
“I was in Toronto once. I married Hilu’s father and he was from Ottawa,
so I’ve been to Ottawa too.”
“What happened?”
“I don’t know how you people can live in a place like that. It’s soulless.
It’s like people living in caves up in the air. It’s just not human. How is it
that someone who isn’t born here, who doesn’t live here, and only spent a
few years here, can love this place and these people so much?”
“I don’t know,” Ken said. “I don’t know how that happened. We can
have a lot of ideas and we can say a lot of things, but the reality is that we
don’t know these things. We don’t know the first thing about love – we
haven’t a clue. We have all sorts of feelings and all sorts of passions. We
call it love and hate, but that’s just a lazy way of expressing something
we know nothing about. I think love is something that is lived. It doesn’t
have very much to do with the other person although we focus the idea
on one person. I think it’s a life lived in a particular way. It encompasses
all the things that are in that life and it depends on how that life is lived,
whether the invitation to love will be heard and accepted. I don’t think
there is any language, including Inuktitut, that truly expresses what that’s
all about. The only conclusion I can come to is the one I’ve given you.”
Joan let a long silence hang between them. Ken finally asked her again,
how she knew this was the place where he had witnessed so much death.
“It’s not just you knowing,” he said. “There’s something more concrete to
it. This is a specific place where a specific thing happened.”
“I know this is the place because my mother knew these people and
knows their story and she knows about you,” Joan said. “This was the
time of my grandmother, and my grandmother knew you. My grandmother
found you very interesting. They called you the quiet Kabluna
– the mysterious white man who had the capacity of silence. That’s how
I know about you.”
“Would it be possible to visit them in Baker Lake?” Ken asked.
“Yes.”
“Could we visit now?”
“They’re away.”
“Away?”
“Visiting.”
“Family and friends?”
“Yes – very far away.”
“So we can’t go and see them?”
“No.”

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562830

https://www.amazon.com/dp/0981073573

Constantine Cavafy

The Illness of Kleitos
Kleitos, a likeable young man,
about twenty-three years old
with excellent upbringing, with rare Greek knowledge
is very sick. The fever found him
that has decimated Alexandria this year.
The fever found him when he was morally exhausted
by sorrow because his lover, a young actor,
had stopped loving him or wanting him.
He is very sick, and his parents tremble.
And an old servant who raised him
also trembles for the life of Kleitos.
In her terrible worry,
she recalls an idol,
an idol she worshipped when she was young,
before she became a servant in this house,
in the house of distinguished Christians and became a Christian.
She secretly takes some pancakes, wine and honey.
She places them in front of the idol. Whatever part
of the prayer she remembers, she chants; ends and middles.
The fool does not understand that the Devil won’t care
whether or not a Christian heals.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562856

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763823

Kariotakis-Polydouri, The Tragic Love Story

Doubt
The young man you expected
won’t come tonight.
What would you had told him? Why?
Let futility vanish
sever the unfortunate sprout.
Don’t let the endless
cunning desire
fool your heart
a secret sadness flows
over this spring evening.
Yet you don’t listen to advice
enchantment has strong hold on you
he’ll never come tonight
and tomorrow will turn
even more painful.
Absence will shine
light into his darkened eyes;
with reserved ardor
a secret grief
will kiss his awkward hands
that I shall see spread
timid in victory
sweet as if they can
caressing waves to pull me
like a pebble into the depth

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562951

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763459

Impulses

Campfire
Urgent for you to breath
enjoy past feats
this morning trickling
river bed sings with
fragmented frames: choice to act
or not is twister
sucking flat and
sharp shapes standing or reclined
hypotenuse of route and goal
or river bridged by fallen tree
horizontal stanza crossed by
vertical song momentum
swirling plans as campfire
smoke ascends to the sky

https://draft2digital.com/book/3744513#print

https://www.amazon.com/dp/0981073565

Yannis Ritsos – Poems, Volume VI

Toward the End
The night guard said he didn’t know. Cars were lined
along the shore with their headlights on. The river, lit
in some places, flowed fast. The soldier was holding
the woman by her hair; the woman was naked.
The frogs sang in the night perforated by yellow dots.
One by one, we hid behind the trees. We had our watches
and waited for our end while we kept a piece of
cotton between our teeth. Then, the handsome trumpeter
appeared high up in the lit window of the tower next to
the escapee with the big flag. Then, nothing was left but
a general, iconic friendship, the wiping of the knife on
the coat, the planting of the lemon tree in the garden.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763785

Wheat Ears

Balance
Capture of a blue piece from
the vastness of the sky
to compliment the miracle of
a man, or a woman, your task
and the word failure doesn’t exist.
This balance between the
ethereal images, and
the grossness of the flesh
becomes the link which
embarks from the top
of your spirit to the tip
of your brush, and
is displayed on your adoring canvas.
The link which ties
the depths of your soul
to the zenith of your marvels
this equilibrium, and
your Cretan sun always
there, gifting with his rays
passion in movement
the song of the nightingales
endlessness of your glance
to the far side of the galaxy.
Here the ephemeral becomes infinite.
Here the end becomes a starting point.
Here the gross turns into abstract.
Here the stop point becomes perpetual.
Here the ever small becomes Gigantic.
Here man becomes Titan.
Here your passion becomes medium.
Here your flesh turns into spirit.
Here your spirit melts into the Godly.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3748127#print

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BKHW4B4S

The Incidentals

New House
He wanted, he said, to build a house
far away from the city hustle and
the bustle of modern life, a house to
uphold stature, forbearance, patience
of the contractor, the last house he’d
built before his time came when he’d
move to his permanent residence, but
this house, he wanted it to be airy and
sunny, comfortable, and kind like its
owner and after he finished building it
he called his pals, walked the grounds,
inspected all the details outside and
inside the house too when
the owner revealed he only regretted
that he never thought to include
in the plans a cistern into which he’d
collect the rainwater for his flowers
which he didn’t like to leave thirsty
when the time came for his last farewell
and you said,
he too followed the steps of incidentals
who come and pass and leave nothing
behind while they hope for a reward
in the lustrous luxury of the afterlife

https://draft2digital.com/book/3745812#print

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763637

Jazz with Ella

excerpt

When the two arrived at the airport in the taxi, later than expected and breathless, Hank rushed up to Jennifer with the words that made her blood freeze.
“Jen, Chopyk knows and he’s furious.” Hank noted the look of horror and the way Volodya grabbed her hand.
“How did he find out?” She didn’t have to ask again; she could see the answer in Hank’s eyes.
“What was I supposed to do? He cornered me. He thought I’d done something to Paul.”
“But I told him that Paul was going with me to Tula.” Her exasperation was turning into a bubble of fear that she could physically feel in her gut.
“Well, geez, you could have told me that…I didn’t know what to answer so I told him the truth—that Paul was staying in the Soviet Union.” He backed away from Jennifer’s anger. “He was going to find out today anyway. How were you going to hide his disappearance on the plane?”
“The same way we did before! It worked—remember, you idiot?” Her voice rose above a shout but then she realized they were still standing in the airport doorway, and she forced herself to stop.
But Hank continued, talking over her. “Listen, I think you should talk to him right now, get on the offensive because I didn’t tell him everything and I can’t figure out how much he knows.”
This rapid fire exchange in English left Volodya behind, but he was picking it up quickly.
“Let’s go meet your Professor Chopyk,” he said to Jennifer. “We tell him everything and get his blessing.”

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562892

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763246

Twelve Narratives of the Gypsy

And along the many lands
a precious beloved place
takes the soul of man
through his eyes and his hands
as wholesome and as bloomed
is this little tree only
in this land it blooms
better than in any other place
as the wax is made of
honey in the honeycomb
and as great people
live behind narrow fences
so long as the masters make
laws governed by logic
to control the people’s wings
and tie down their feet
so long as in flowerless ravines
and on rocks with no verdure
in the orchards and
in the faraway skies
love is fed by hatred and
by anger and by war
and the Paradise is guarded
by the sword or by the fire

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0D3LP7NW6

Titos Patrikios – Selected Poems

VII
You bloomed under the sun that will go down someday
and I sustain myself under the sun that hasn’t risen yet.
Darkness is taking the space between us.
The sea still gesticulates in your chest
time has been trapped in your lips
twilight perches between your legs
the wind fades away and rewrites your dress.
Your negative mould petrified
on our sandy space.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562972

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08L1TJNNF