Song I walked all around your house (the moth flew around the lamp until it met its sweet death) though you didn’t come out that I’d burn into the flame of your eyes. Alas, the fragrance of the body and of the soul contamination will spoil one night even more alas since I won’t be the spoiler.
Flowers of the rock before the green sea with veins that reminded me of other loves gleaming in the slow drizzle flowers of the rock, faces that came when none spoke and spoke to me that they let me touch them after the silence among pine trees, oleanders and plane trees.
a barren woman who cries by the door, sniffing in her snot, just to hear a child, until a small tiny star takes my last argument away that the world isn’t nice at all. When I finally decided to start it was already late. All Homeric adventures were sang many years ago only a few flashlights with their yellow light were left and the nostalgia of a world beyond this world. I of course tried to familiarize myself plucking poultry or sitting on the toilet with the rats where I used to die a little at a time an impossible thing since each time they rang the bell I always appeared in front of them, a corpse full of life; then I took after the fly and its daily chores or someone who killed and after he went to eat at the restaurant, having a letter in his pocket, the letter with the divine confession that no one ever received. Another time I’ll narrate to you about the witness who was very thirsty in the desert, they say, until he died in order to write his name in the water.
these voices of the innumerable people, pagans as they were called, the ones who had died under the knife of the first Christians, who exterminated thousands and thousands, as the scholars claimed, perhaps even millions, to establish the new religion? It was written in certain books, not of course in the regular books taught in schools, that millions of Hellenes were eliminated so Christianity could spread over the lands, and perhaps these voices and groans Hermes was hearing coming from the depths of the earth were none other than the pain those millions of Hellenes suffered. He stood motionless as if to listen to a discourse coming from somewhere deep under the floor of the monastery, groans of people killed and buried under the soil of this church, when unexpectedly a thought came to him: did the purpose justified the means when a man is condemned to death for the success of a movement, did the death of a man in the hands of another was rightfully approved by the system which always craves to retain power over the people? And what about the killing of a brother by brother, only for the killer to gain the approval and help of a superior? Such thoughts overtook Hermes to the point of feeling sick, indeed he felt the need to run away, far away from this place, which he had visited with all the positive intentions of looking into the monastery correspondence. He felt suffocated. He put the papers away, he walked out of the church, he didn’t stop to thank the monk who helped him, he just walked out at a fast pace as if to distance himself from voices and images he wanted to forget. Then, when far out, he felt his heart had calmed down as he climbed a short hill since he wanted to change his route and followed a narrow trail towards the top of the hill to reach his village on the other side. He surely felt a lot better, and quite unexpectedly, a tune rose from within his essence to his lips, and he started singing a local tune; soon, he reached the top of the hill and found an old man on a donkey right ahead of him. He greeted him and then asked, “Are there any partridges around here, Uncle?” “I have seen a couple of flocks over that mountain,” the old man pointed to the other side of the horizon.
Disfigurements The modest, the simple, the right to bread, the bed that was made of planks, a humble window without a feather a few books next to it. A lightness blown straight from the afternoon sky. Here, only here, the minimal, the basics of the internal view, the alarm clock, the saw, the shelf, with the green bottles, and the naked arm on the chest. We, of course, had our secret dead men and other distances, long, short, with shops lit, between 7 and 10 o’clock, by old oil lamps, where the naïve daughter, half dressed, for the first time discerns, in the old mirror, her right leg enlarged up to the opposite hill and the cart with the long crests that passed and missed her.
Today you won’t awake one who’s in deep sleep today you won’t only bring a new dawn to the world but you’ll accomplish something amazing: all the immortals who have died, those I buried myself the immortals who have died you’ll bring to life with your music of resurrection. For this you have brought me to the cemetery, here to wait and for this all things around here are joyous and bloomed and rejoicing, which I’ve never seen before around the graves nor have I seen cypresses so flexible like now, like bodies that wish to embrace and kiss like newlyweds. And the graves are but tables waiting to be set with flavourful foods for crowned revellers who’ll come and feast until the new rosy dawn comes.
Past Looking back I wonder why everything I left without any effort to change them remained as beautiful as nature had crafted them. Who was I, after all who once wished to shift the balance of the universe by changing the depth of the beautiful cove of a woman’s body and the length of a man’s penis without the Grand Master’s plan?
In Alexandria (31 B.C.) From his small town, close to the suburbs and still full of dust from the trip the travelling salesman arrives. And “Frankincense” and “Gum!” “The Finest Olive Oil!” “Fragrance for your Hair!” He cries out on the streets. But the big noise of people, and the music and the parades won’t let him be heard. The crowd pushes him, pulls him along, hits him. And when finally, totally dazed, he asks, what madness is this? Someone throws at him the gigantic lie of the palace, that Anthony triumphs in Greece.
Between her horns it held a heavy piece of the sky like a crown. A little later it lowered her head and drank some water from the creek licking, with her bloodied tongue, the other cool tongue of her watery idol, as if licking her internal maternally, serenely, irreversibly, widely her internal wound from the outside, as if licking the silent, great, round wound of the world — perhaps it even quenched its thirst — perhaps our blood is the only thing that quenches our thirst — who knows. Soon after she raised her head over the water, not touching anything, untouched too and serene like a saint, and only a small lake made of the blood of her lips remained between her feet that were rooted in the river, a small red lake, in the shape of a map that slowly enlarged and vanished, melted as if its painless, freed blood traveled far away to an invisible vein of the cosmos; and for that reason she was calm, as if she had learned that our blood doesn’t vanish, that nothing vanishes, nothing, in this great nothing, the inconsolable, cruel, incomparable, so sweet, so consolable, so nothing.
Centaur Morning and the horses neigh tied onto the froth of impenitent sea rustle of naked leaves punished leaves forty times lashed by the winds climbs on the shoulder-blade of Sunday and on the Pelion waters. Here the blood of serpents poisons the ripen languor of serenity like rust the veins of marble and time gathers the wings of ash to debate with the blond gables now that in the sleep of the olive tree the spider forms its wrinkly netting. In the fields the lustful sprouts quiver and bathe in the fountain of convulsion.