Antony Fostieris – Selected Poems

Visit of a Thought
I’ve been trying to sleep
for the last three hours.
August heat
sweat of the mind and thoughts,
all around, like mosquitos,
poke it.
What has happened to me?
They rarely come during the day
now I surely feel happy
or to be exact:
I forbid such visits. As soon as by chance
a thought comes to my mind it soon
invites the other, for just
a little while, a short visit, you know all this,
when voila: caravans of inter-related images
charge inside of me seeking
a permanent habitation. I don’t want them.
Then sealing the borders safely, I end it.
Because I’m not American, nor can
my lands feed so many migrants.

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

In Turbulent Times

excerpt

Nora never let Joe know that they had been espied that night. She continued to write her long letters every week, letters in which she tried to hide her sadness and her melancholy and her bitter disappointment. Three months after Joe’s departure she was pregnant again, and that added to her bitterness. But she hid her gall from Joe. She did not want him to think she was accusing him of failing her. Joe wrote sad, serious letters with only an occasional light or amusing remark. But they were letters full of tenderness and love, like those he used to write before he learned of Nora’s marriage. It was almost as if the marriage had never happened, as if Joe and Nora were the lovers they had been before, with their own marriage to look forward to when the war was over. Nora realised that this was a fantasy to which Joe clung to help him through the bloody butcher days of war, the black, tense nights of watch and wait and pray. She gave him what he needed. She wrote what he wanted to read. She almost came to believe in it herself. Nor was it difficult. That they were both as deeply in love as ever was true and needed no deception. That they could ever enjoy that love outside of their passionate letters was where they lived in a soothing fantasy.
As time passed Joe’s letters became more morbid. He was losing his friends one by one but kept referring to a very old companion who was with him still, who never left his side. This old companion was never named, and it was some time before Nora realised who the companion was. In one of his letters Joe wrote:
He’s been with me since that day your father pulled me out of the harbour. He fought over me with Dr Starkey when I had pneumonia and he lost that time. He wants me to go with him somewhere, but I just turn to him and say, “I’m sorry, friend; but I have this girl back in Ireland and I’m going to her first. We have a lot to do, this girl and I. I hope you can wait a bit longer.” He’s waiting, my darling, but he’s becoming impatient. How long can this war last?’
Joe was excited about a posting to a Buckley-class frigate, the HMS Bullen. On 6 December 1944, the Bullen was torpedoed by U-Boat U-775, in the frigid waters of Pentland Firth, northwest of Scotland. The Bullen broke in two and sank in two hours. Of the one hundred and sixty-eight crew members on board, seventy-one went down with the ship. One of those lost was Chief Petty Officer Joseph Ignatius Carney. His turn had come. And this time there was no Michael Carrick to pull him out of the icy water.
A few weeks later Nora gave birth to a daughter whom she christened Josephine Siobhan.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562904

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763270

Hours of the Stars

Swan
We lost ourselves in unconsecrated churches
since the days of Leonardo.
On the wall we hanged
the beautiful woman of the loiterer
icon of an ancient youth.
In lakes
wedged between the beard of rocks
we saw our strange features
afraid of the thunderous flapping of eagle wings.
What we recounted wasn’t ours.
Coppers of the holy oak
in the trenches of red hills
that shatter the lance of winter.
Morning dance
that hid in the viscera of the oak and
in the frowning of the motionless stone.
Our struggle
our grief
buried in the unstruck chord of a lyre
that will brake on your touch.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562939

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

Redemption

excerpt

Hermes felt so overwhelmed by the euphoria of the company
that his pride rose again. The blood of the immortals that ran
through his veins was the Same blood that ran in the veins of these
people, with their hairy chests and their large hands that could crush
rocks and turn them to dust.
The party wound down slowly as the early dawn hours
approached. Hermes’ group boarded the same bus that brought them
there and returned to their village.
Days went by, and he still couldn’t have enough of admiring
this and that, observing ways of the locals, enjoying everything that
came along. Then, one evening, while Hermes was out on a long walk,
his uncle called from Athens, leaving him a message that the exam
results had been posted and the graduation ceremony was scheduled
for a few days later, and the time had come for Hermes to leave his
village. The next morning, he went to the city and reserved a ticket
for the boat ride to Piraeus.

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

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

Yannis Ritsos – Poems, Volume I

Memory
Father came home late He didn’t say good evening
Mother was concerned with her children She didn’t pay
attention to him
The children enjoyed her care They didn’t pay attention that he
didn’t
say good evening He
had his hands clasped behind him
had talked to the rain in the harvested fields
behind the woodsman’s cabin He had a double barrel shotgun
across his shoulder
He stood near the window alone
and when a strong lightning strike lit the glass
I saw the cross of the window incised in his forehead
Perhaps we learned of that separation tonight
perhaps the same cross is incised since then
in the lit wall of our silence

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562834

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763076

Kariotakis-Polydouri, The Tragic Love Story

Sadness of the Dusk
The roses of the dusk bloomed again tonight
golden, rosy, and purple
they faded tonight shedding their leaves
as I viewed them every evening
and every time I drink their fragrant dew
from their bloomed dawn I get intoxicated
in their soft and last breath
I consume each joy to its best.
Yet upon gazing the dusk tonight, I thought
of our love, that someday it will end
and when the roses of the dusk bloomed
golden, rosy, and purple
as they faded tonight shedding their leaves
this evening I got saddened.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562951

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

Constantine Cavafy

The 25th Year of his Life
He goes to the tavern quite often
where they met last month.
He asked, but they had nothing to tell him.
From their words, he understood that he had met
with a completely unknown person,
one of the many unknowns and questionable
youthful faces that passed through there.
However, he goes to the tavern quite often, at night,
and he sits and stares at the entrance,
he stares at the entrance until he gets tired.
Perhaps he may walk in. Perhaps he may come tonight.
For nearly three weeks, he has done this.
His mind has become sick with lust.
The kisses have stayed on his mouth.
All his flesh suffers constantly from the desire.
The touch of that body is all over him.
He wants to make love to him again.
It is understood that he tries not to reveal himself.
But sometimes he just doesn’t care.
After all, he knows what he’ll get himself into,
and he is okay with it. It is not unlikely that this life
of his will get him into a disastrous scandal.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562856

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

Introspection

Rho

…honour due to the ancient beauty and
I asked the primeval wisdom
about the absurd way of modern life
and I was told by the eternal soul
of the immortals that consumerism
had taken modern life in its grip
and I noticed the empty glances of
the young women and men that
only knew of lust and sexual pleasure
then I realized the destiny of the anchorite
was meant for me, and I asked
whether in a future time, the ancient
beauty could be restored, and the virgin
of the Parthenon shed tears
seeing the tourists flocking like harpies
and inauspicious signs of modern life that
I searched without finding any resolution
nor catharsis among the yellow-haired tourists.
Without fear, I asked the ancient beauty
but I received no answer to please my soul.

https://draft2digital.com/book/4118210#print

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763777

The Unquiet Land

excerpt

The bottle had been opened but little drunk from it. “As you can see, I haven’t been overindulging.” He pulled the cork out of the neck, poured two glasses and handed one to Caitlin.
“Thank you, Padraig.” As Caitlin placed the glass of wine on the table beside her, she noticed an old, soiled envelope. “This is addressed to my father,” she said, turning to look at Padraig.
“Yes, your father gave it to me when I left Corrymore to go to university.”
“You’ve kept it all this time?” Caitlin idly picked up the envelope.
“Yes. Seven years I’ve had it. You can read the letter if you wish.”
“No, not if it’s personal.”
“No, it is nothing private or secret that you have no right to read. It is addressed to your father after all, not to me.” Padraig took the envelope from Caitlin, removed the letter from inside and unfolded it. “It makes for rather disturbing reading though.”
Intrigued, Caitlin accepted the letter from Padraig and started to read with difficulty the untidy scrawl in which the letter was written. It was dated “Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty, Scotland, 11th March, 1902.” Caitlin turned to the last of the letter’s several pages; it was signed by Dr. Hamish Graham.
Dear Mr MacLir,
Thank you for your letter of 2nd ult. I apologise for my tardy reply but my practice has been busy of late, as is not unusual at this time of year. You requested any information I might have concerning the boy Padraig, over and above what little I was able to communicate to you during our brief meeting in November. You tell me that you have formally adopted Padraig as your son, so I can appreciate your desire to learn more about the laddie. However, until the month of July, 1899, we knew very little, not even his surname which he refused to divulge for fear, I believe, of being returned to the care of his uncle from which he and his mother had been so cruelly expelled. That part of Padraig’s unhappy history you are already familiar with.
What transpired in the month of July following Padraig’s arrival in Kyle was a disturbing court case in which a farm labourer from a community twelve statute miles from Plockton, a man of well-established bad character, was tried and convicted to hang for the brutal rape and strangulation of a vagrant woman who had been given permission to sleep in the hay in a barn belonging to this man’s employer. At the rapist’s trial, about which I read in several newspapers, both local and national, it was revealed that the woman’s father, the Rev. Magnus MacArtan,

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562888

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763203

Nikos Engonopoulos – Poems

the day passes
the hour passes
society laughs
the excuses are retained
yet, the one who committed
the crime and went to sleep
didn’t sense
that dawn came and he woke up
and walked about
in the horrible darkness of death
(his mouth is already full of dirt)
and of the one who lied
and acted unjustly
and slapped
they will pay for it and their children
will do so too
up to the fifth generation
there is God
hearts and kidneys are examined
and next to the crippled justice of man
the Fury hides
nested deep in the guilty man
merciless and unforgiving
who doesn’t care about officialities and titles
that good life brings but in God’s name,
it doesn’t care and it punishes
harshly
the brainless and timid who commit

https://draft2digital.com/book/3744799#print

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763734