Blood, Feathers and Holy Men

excerpt

Questions of Survival
“Why does Father Finten dislike me so?” Rordan held the post in place while Keallach
lifted the beam into position and secured it with two strands of vine.
“I’m sure you are mistaken, Brother. Father Finten cares for all of us. Hold that post
steady. I cannot tie it secure if you keep waving it around.” Keallach lashed the two
pieces together. Now he stood and faced Rordan. “I think Father Finten likes his Brothers
to be trusting, not always thinking the worst will happen as if abandoned by God.”
Rordan shook his head and spat a tiny mosquito onto the sand. “Do you really
believe that? Finten does his own share of complaining. Then he tells us to have
faith in Divine Providence.” He wished he could say what he really felt about Father
Finten without having to feel so guilty about it, like he was speaking against some
great saint.
“Be happy; we’re free of those Viking slavers.”
“That big wrestler could kill us all in our sleep.” Rordan did not really believe that,
but he hated to be put in his place.
“If Blonde Bear slits anyone’s throat, I am sure it will be yours. Now let’s get
this other end up and perhaps we’ll have a place to sleep tonight.” Keallach lifted
the other end of the beam into position and secured it, while Rordan held the
post almost steady.
White Eagle greeted the young brave, Broken Wing, with calm patience.
He himself would investigate. Mountain Lion, levelheaded in times of emergency,
would accompany him. This time, they’d approach the camp with great
care. These hairy strangers were unpredictable. This much they had already
learned.
“Vikings have been raping and killing innocent people since I can remember.
Why should Illska and Hrafen be any different?” Finten spoke as he took the lance
Bjorn had cut for him from a straight sapling. He felt the sharp barbed tip with his
thumb, having never before held such a weapon in his hand.
Bjorn was cutting another sapling to form a lance for himself. “In the old days, it
was different. Usually it was kill or be killed. Better to kill them first. Some fought
for land. Some fought for family. Of course, many raided for profit. And yes, many
were cruel and loved killing, raping and burning. But not all Norsemen are pirates.”
Having trimmed off the side branches, he now began to cut a point at the small
end. “My father and my father’s father were hunters. We lived on the land in peace.
My father treated his thralls with care and respect. They were allowed their language…

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https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763106

Arrows

excerpt

…how to use the strainer made of woven palm leaves. She took me to a
kind of oven that consisted of a circular structure with a large, flat
earthen plate on top and a fire burning underneath. I poured the
grated root and scattered it into a more or less round cake. I stood
there watching over it, lest it burn. I admired my first cassava cake,
an irregular spill, and fingered it so often that it cracked into pieces. I
ate it that night—it tasted like triumph.
From a tree beside the hut where I slept, I ate mamones by the
dozen, playing with the big, velvety seeds in my mouth until my
teeth felt as if they would fall out. The guavas, which had disgusted
me because of the little worms that sometimes infested them, I now
ate with delight—worms and all.
In time, I learned to differentiate the people of the Teque nation
from the others, who remained indistinguishable. Pure joy filled me
when, thanks to the boys who had taught me to use a bow, I
contributed a small, wild pig. After that, people spurned me less.
Tiaroa, Guacaipuro´s sister, came to me one day and offered me
an onoto—a red-dyed, sleeveless, hoodless tunic. My cassock was in
tatters, but it was the significance of the gift that left me speechless:
they had accepted me. I took the tunic and went to Tamanoa´s grave
to show it to him, so that he could rest assured that I was making
progress.

Weeks turned into months. I kept my distance from Apacuana. As
far as I could tell, she was not living with Baruta, and yet she was not
with other men either. Sometimes when I went to my cave to pray, I
would wonder to myself what might happen if she ever followed me
there, and I struggled to dismiss these thoughts, and often flayed
myself accordingly.
I preferred to make progress teaching my language to
Guacaipuro. If he could one day learn to read the New Testament,
he might be awakened to the ways of our Lord. I often ate at his
house and exchanged words with him. He was particularly puzzled…

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https://www.amazon.com/dp/0981073522

Yannis Ritsos – Poems, Volume I

Hour of Song
Next to the wine jugs
next to the fruit baskets
we forgot to sing
On the evening of our separation
with the consent of
the evening star alone
we sang

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Übermensch

Treason
It was the second month of his betrayal, he dared died,
our God and we had come so far that we felt the need
to yell it from the depths of our lungs to make sure
the neighbors heard it: we were still here and we were
still poor.
Emptied syringes laid on the ground, relatives heard
the news, one of them, teary eyed, filled a glass
of brandy to our saints who died of sorrow, truly what
else was expected of us at this hour of reckoning?
Suddenly the bankrupt priest refused to eat with us
and taking his leave didn’t forget to claim his right to
his heaven, a man of principles that he was and
we knew the vacated house of the priest was already
occupied by Hades.

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https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BGFRGLVH

Neo-Hellene Poets, an Anthology of Modern Greek Poetry

VOICES OF THE SEA
Drink your wine in the dark tavern by the sea,
now that the autumn rains have started,
drink it with sailors facing you and stooping fishermen,
men whom poverty and angry seas have punished.
Drink your wine so that your soul grows free
and if grim Fate arrives smile upon it
and if new sufferings befall you let them also drink
and when Hades comes, calmly offer Him a drink as well.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562959

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763513

Wellspring of Love

excerpt

“What are you doing in those clothes, Rachael? You look like a
hippie.” The words had only just left his mouth when he realized that
was exactly her intent.
Looking up at him, she giggled. “We were danshing. It wash … it
wash fun.” Her head fell back onto the sofa and she closed her eyes.
Ronald could not bring himself to move from where he stood staring
at her. He had rescued Rachael from many scrapes, or worse, but
this time he was at a total loss. What could he do with her? She was
drunk, that much was obvious. Ronald had seen the signs before but
never, God forbid, in his own family. He had the overwhelming urge
to sit down and cry. Taking a tight rein on his emotions, he leaned
over her, took her arm and tried to pull her to her feet.
“Don’t you dare go to sleep. I’ll make some strong coffee, then I’m
taking you home.” Let Morley and Tyne deal with her; this time she’s
gone too far.
“Let me sleep, please Ronnie,” she begged.
In her plea Ronald heard again the cries of a little girl – lost, cold
and near death in a frozen wasteland created by a prairie blizzard.
Hesitating for only a moment, he said, “Okay, you can sleep it off in
my bed. Come on, I’ll help you upstairs.”
“Oh no, you won’t, Ronald. She’ll sleep down here for what’s left
of the night.”
At the sound of Aunt Millie’s unusually stern voice, he swung around.
She was standing in the doorway of the downstairs hallway. Gray hair
formed a cloud around her pale face. One hand clutched a terrycloth robe
around her ample bosom; the other hand held out a long flannel nightgown
and a blanket in the direction of the startled girl on the sofa.
“Get out of those clothes and put this on. You’ll stay on the sofa
tonight, young lady. Ronnie needs his sleep. I’ll talk to you in the
morning when you’ve sobered up.” Millie Harper turned abruptly
towards her bedroom.

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https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763327

Wheat Ears

Sandals
Young boy with sandals
and a hole in his shirt elbow
ideal poem laughter
like glory of tattered books
on the table where coffee
steams above your cup
you grasp the sugar bowl
gaze through blue glass
the young boy chases
umbrella shadows on the grass
while others fight chimeras at the borders
or hunt for peace behind barricades
raising unfurled flags they sing marching
paeans and glory myths for the
fallen boy with sandals

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Antony Fostieris – Selected Poems

The Apple Tree
Most of the times, I think for free
with no pencil. Gain and loss steam up
as, with severed arms, I harvest
the ripened fruit.
How can you tell the gender of a tree?
I remember a lazy apple tree
which imagined apples in its armpits
yet it resisted the spring flowers.
Brainless apple tree: its rustle but
sobs and hiccups
of the root pus. An internal sob
for all who reach their purpose
and are happy with the dowry.
If I now mention that apple tree
is because such imagination
of fruit was considered
an insult to nature like heresy
to the dogma of creation.
Desolate tree, unproductive.
They cut it down,
burned it
and its flames lick my last branches
as long as I’m talking to you.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763653

Hours of the Stars

Charioteer
You took the main road that dashes down
from the dark thighs of Delphi
like the arrow’s lissome quiver
symmetrical
to their questionable stature
you vibrated its unruffled gravel-road
with polemic sandals and the waterfall thunder
you held tight in your hands the reigns of the sea
and a reddish coppery gleam.
Arriving
you talked about the serenity of the god
who suckles the nipple of a star.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763408

Tasos Livaditis – Selected Poems

Adulthood
If I write my biography someday, I won’t forget to report my
hatred for dye houses; they are spiteful, and when they returned
the last children’s clothes, without wings, we got quite ill and
when we recovered, we felt awkward and strange, like the ones who
have disappeared for years, and when they return, they make excuses
that the garden was far away. Where had they gone? Unknown.
Only now, mother cries more often.

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https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763831