Constantine Cavafy

Mirror by the Entrance
The wealthy house had in its entryway
a huge, quite old mirror,
bought at least eighty years ago.
A very handsome young man, a tailor’s employee,
(on Sundays an amateur athlete)
stood there holding a parcel. He gave it
to a member of the household, who went inside
to get a receipt. The tailor’s employee
was left alone and waited.
He went close to the mirror and had a look
at himself, and he adjusted his tie. Five minutes later,
they brought him the receipt. He took it and left.
But the old mirror that had seen and seen,
during its long years of life,
thousands of things and faces,
the old mirror rejoiced now,
and felt proud that it had received
that gorgeous beauty for a few minutes.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562856

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

Tasos Livaditis – Selected Poems

The events that followed his revolutionary ardour and all the changes that took place, most importantly the decay of human values and the spread of consumerism, didn’t stop him from overcoming his personal trials and becoming the expression of his era. Thus, he opened a passage toward the future light using his past experiences, the lost vision and his infinite nostalgia, and he reached his apex in his latest books where he enclosed all he had planned to reveal in verse:
And perhaps this is the unsaid: as if someone close to your cries,
one you’ll never see, nor will he ever meet you.
But at night, when you both come back together, you
Open the door to the old room.
I was so afraid that when they took something
From me, I felt grateful
They at least left me with their memory.
Livaditis’ poetry is alive, as is the memory of him. It is poetry open to the populace, addressed to those who walk toward new eras, to those who at least can grasp his warning:
Ah, life! A stranger’s hat we put on hastily
in the panic of the bombing.
~ Spiros Katsimis

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562930

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

Redemption

excerpt

…thinking of going hunting tomorrow. Is there anything around here
we may find?”
“You are going hunting without a permit?” George asked.
“That is right; we’ll arrange it. Do you have the guns?” Demetre
insisted.
“Yes, you can have mine, and my son has his, which his mother
has kept hidden for a long time.”
Hermes was surprised.
“You know your mother; she wouldn’t let me touch her son’s
stuff.”
Despina, by now, had already set the table with her best linen.
She served the food in her best dishes. They all ate with a good appetite
and drank to Hermes’ success. After a few glasses of wine, his
father began to speak more freely, and they had a very pleasant
evening.

https://draft2digital.com/book/4172538#print

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763858

Ken Kirkby, A Painter’s Quest for Canada

excerpt

They were marvelling at the line of diminutive Inuksuit that curved along
the water’s edge toward a far-off boulder that seemed to reach almost fifty
feet into the sky. The Inuksuit told a story, Ken said, and after a lunch of
fresh fried fish he led them toward the boulder. As they walked the boulder
diminished in size until they stood beside it and found it was about
three feet tall, pink, perfectly smooth, and resting on top of an immense
gray rock that had been partially heaved out of the tundra.
“This is a fishing Inukshuk,” he told them. “It tells you that this is a
good place to go fishing. How does it say that? If the fishing is good, the
Inuit take a stone out of the water and put it on top of another stone
with little Inuksuit leading the way. A passerby who had never been in
this land would know immediately that he could catch fish here. Other
configurations of stone describe what kind of fish are here. Essentially,
this is a language.”
He explained that the permafrost lurks just under the surface of the
tundra, and below that lay thousands of feet of ice. The ground above the
permafrost where the ice melted consisted almost entirely of rich humus
built up over eons by the tiny plants that grew and died there. An eightinch
tree takes hundreds of years to grow to that height in the Arctic’s
short season. The fibres of the humus stretched out along the surface and
down to the permafrost, siphoning the water from the ice and sending it
into the atmosphere. As the wind travelled across the surface of the land
in buffeting gusts, it created rudimentary magnifying lenses of the millions
of tiny water bubbles streaming into the air. The farther away you
were from an object the more lenses you were looking through and the
larger the distant object appeared.
That night after supper he walked down to the dock with a fly-fishing
rod. Arctic grayling congregated in the shallows here and after a few causal
casts, he landed a fine three-pound fish. As he unhooked it and slipped
it back into the water he noticed Karen sitting on an overturned bucket
at the far end of the dock.
“I’d like to try that,” she said.
He handed her the rod and described the process but even after all
these years he still had no idea how to explain that it was a line with no
weight and it needed to fly guided by minimal strength and energy, and
perfect timing.
She cast a couple of times and smiled. “I like this,” she said and while
the fly lay on the water, a large grayling took the bait. Ken disengaged it,
gave the rod back to her and left her to sort out the tangles and continue
casting. He sat on the overturned bucket at the far end of the dock and
watched.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562830

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

Kariotakis-Polydouri, The Tragic Love Story

Futile
Internal voiceless tears of grief
have dried up on my pale cheeks
and unwillingly I’ve searched
for the meaning of my demise
and I stood and asked
all my beautiful adornments
is this supposedly love?
And is this same with life?
And I stood and asked why
in my youth filled with fragrance
I heard the voice, the tedious
voice that was leading my way
and I stood there long enough
for my question-laughter to freeze
until the deep darkness slowly
reflected in my eyes.
No voice reaches here anymore
from all the powerful things I had
the wise people looked at me
and left saying a ghost that I was.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562951

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

Yannis Ritsos – Poems, Volume VI

Straight
No excuses, he said, no regrets. Next, in the baths
you could hear the skinny old woman washing
after she placed her three rings on the moist glass shelf
and her dentures on the cover of the bowl. Outside,
the sun was buzzing between the trees. Three birds
cawed higher up where they were flying, so we
wouldn’t notice the three men drown in the well,
those same men whose swollen bellies we pressed
with our two fingers.

https://draft2digital.com/book/4278093#print

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

Wheat Ears

Flies
Flies take charge of the wound
decay creeps into his nostrils
sorceress curses and in the corner
the blood-filled bucket
avenging bull wondered
what was accomplished with a death
the matador’s chest gored by right horn
deep aspirating gash where
breeze collapsed
his eloquent movements
fogged his poetic eyes
while the brassy band cheered victory:
of the bull
the matador
or the poet’s
composing this eulogy?

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

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

Small Change

excerpt

THIS IS DEEP MEMORY. Childhood. The South Beach summer house on Staten Island. Late light fades from the sky, the window, the upstairs bedroom where Rick lies under a cool sheet, watching the stars come out, listening to silence.
Slowly, as his mind opens, the heavy stillness after rain dissolves into small sounds. A breeze sweeps through the willow and sighs off over the glassy skritch of crickets, tree frogs like a troop of wet grace notes, the faint hiss of traffic on wet pavement from Hyland Boulevard, and beyond that, far away, but close, too, like the pulse of a double bass, the sea builds to a rush and subsides, again, and again, with a soft crash that makes him think of God and time without end.
Then, below the open window, it begins. Tentative chords from his father’s guitar. Three clear notes. A fourth. A fifth. A melody takes shape, picked up by his uncle Vincenzo’s mandolin. It’s lazy at first, until his mother’s clear soprano joins the strings. A male voice comes under it, then another, and a song rises to full strength, steered off and back by the wind. He smiles to himself. It’s what he was waiting for. He rides that comfort into dreams.
Rick sits at the oval table in the kitchen with his colouring book. He is trying to keep the slippery crayon tips inside the lines. At the other end, his father and his uncle Vincenzo are playing a game called briscola. They study their cards then slap them down hard enough to make them bounce off the coarse grain of the wood. Sometimes they shout at each other, but he knows it’s for fun and their raised voices pass over him without breaking his concentration.
As he works, he can hear his grandfather, Arsenio, talking back to the radio in the front room where his wife, Theresa, argues good-naturedly

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763157

Twelve Narratives of the Gypsy

excerpt

And it was my soul’s most
precious land somewhere
there at the Balkans
somewhere there at Rhodope.
Punished by the people
here I’ve come to you, oh
virgin forests, embrace me
and listen to my soul-violin.
And the trees told me: we know
of you, but your soul doesn’t
like the soft words and fresh
dew which drips like honey
from our leaves and always talks
to the shepherds, the frontiersmen,
the couples with their kisses.
Yet our branches, flowers and
fruit, our fragrance and our birds
exhume words as if from our
sunless depths and these
words are only heard by those
who know how to read the secrets

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

Prairie Roots

excerpt

…after chores and supper, for a few hours of fun. When
the moon illuminated the snow on crisp, clear nights we would
run and play and wrestle on the snow banks, or in the straw piles
created by the threshing crew. After getting our fill of the night
air it would be time to thaw out with hot chocolate and finish the
evening off with a game of cards. And then the walk home to be
in by ten o’clock and to bed.
This too was an experience in the winter. After our second
house was built our bedroom was the attic itself, unheated except
for whatever warmth found its way up the narrow stairway. So
the first one in warmed up the bed and resisted sharing the heat
with whoever was to share that bed.We slept in pairs, compatibility
being established by various methods including by dictates
from the parents—when all else failed. And it failed often. Scraps
broke out on minimum provocation and disagreements could last
an hour, a day or weeks.
Piling into a cold bed with a brother who was after your hide was
risky business. You were as likely as not welcomed by a smelly fart
which stopped you from getting your face under the covers to take
advantage of body heat. Instead it was necessary to tuck the feather
tick tightly under the chin to prevent any vapours from escaping
upward, at the same time to gently lift the edge of the tick with a
foot to provide an outlet for the smell. And no touching or bedlam
would break loose and one or the other would be downstairs pleading
his case in long johns before the court of last resort, mother, to
be specific.Mother’s justice was gentle enough and, by comparison
with Pop’s justice, downright benevolent. Pop would resolve our
disagreements by following a policy of no-fault resolution or, to put
it more accurately, all fault resolution whereby we were all equally
guilty and therefore all received equal punishment. It worked. We
usually went to mother to be the mediator. At least with her we
were given a chance to develop our case.
There were many things one could not do in our attic bedroom.
One could not take a glass of water up to the bedside; it froze by
morning.One could not kick off the covers; one froze by morning.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562900

https://www.amazon.com/dp/0980897920