Ken Kirkby, A Painter’s Quest for Canada

excerpt

Keith nodded. “Well, that’s something I want to talk to you about. I can
help you and I want you to help me.” His room bookings for the following
year, when the lodge would be completed, were with Americans and
a handful of Europeans – not a single Canadian on the reservation list.
“You seem to have a great capacity for publicity and getting media attention,
and I’d like you to help me. In return, you can come and stay here,
have the use of airplanes – anything you want. But I need you to help me
to get people to come.”
Ken thought about the problem and suggested a slide show in his studio
with multiple projectors. He enlisted the help of Avril and Roberto;
they commandeered Tergey, the young Norwegian pilot who worked for
the lodge.
As Keith had predicted it wasn’t long before they heard the sound of
an approaching float plane that glided to a landing on the lake. It pulled
up to the dock and two men stepped out. They shook hands and asked
Ken what he was doing at the lodge. “Fishing with my son,” he said, and
excused himself, explaining that it had been a long trip and they were
tired.
They crawled into their sleeping bags, pulled caribou hides over them,
and drifted blissfully off to sleep. Too soon, a hand shaking his arm woke
him. “There’s someone I want you to meet,” Keith said.
Joan Scottie, a reserved and beautiful Inuk woman, had been born
about two miles down Ferguson Lake. “Joan has been a friend for years,”
Keith said. “She’s here to help us finish building the lodge. She is the most
capable human being you will ever encounter. There isn’t anything she
can’t do. She was born in an igloo and is a computer expert. She is also
the finest hunter and fisher you will ever meet.”
Joan was also a photography buff. She took Ken to her hut near Keith’s
home and showed him a collection of photographs. Her Scot and Inuk,
father, Basil Scottie, who was almost totally deaf and dumb, glared fiercely
at the camera. Another photo showed her family, two men, and seven
women, standing formally in a row, dressed in bleached white hides with
intricate designs.
“I think I have been where these pictures were taken,” Ken said, studying
them. “But I can’t be sure.”
“Yes,” she said. “They were taken near here and you were there.”
“How do you know?”
“I heard.”
“Who told you?”
“Old folks.”
“I had an incredible experience – a horrible experience that never left
me. It was somewhere in this region – a lot of people died.”
“Yes, I know.”

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562830

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

Blood, Feathers and Holy Men

excerpt

Brother Rordan, tied up alone in another hut, wondered about his new friend, Ul.
So far, no one had been able to get him to say more than a few words. Rordan still
knew nothing about him except for his strange name.
Brown Bear and his son, Running Deer, returned from mourning at the Island
of the Dead to find the camp deserted. Corn Mother was gone but had drawn into
the sandy soil at the door to his lodge a picture of the hunt. He erased the message
meant for his eyes alone.
A young Native with spear stood watch while Rordan relieved himself at a long
pit, dug some distance from the huts. As he squatted, he looked toward the hut
where he’d spent the night, hoping for some sign of the others but he was alone
with his guard. Perhaps they were only being let out one at a time. His business
done, Rordan was led back to one of a dozen or more small huts. The huts were
slung low and covered with sheets of thick birch bark woven between saplings. At
the centre of the camp, several Native women ground corn and roots on a large flat
rock surface with wooden mortars.
In the semidarkness, Rordan’s guard tied his hands behind his back and attached
him once more to the centre lodge pole. Another Native came in with a wooden
bowl of corn mush and baked fish and tried to feed him but he refused to open his
mouth. Rordan heard distant drumming and felt a headache coming on. His eyes
burned but he couldn’t close them. The Native gave up his attempt to feed him and
finally left with the food bowl. Rordan preferred the quiet and darkness.
Brown Bear asked to see the captives. He looked in on two but did not recognize
either. In the farthest lodge, he saw Bjorn, his companion from the night of
the hunting feast, tied to the lodge pole, refusing to eat the food being offered by
Broken Wing. Brown Bear took the bowl and sat facing Bjorn. As soon as Broken
Wing left the lodge, Brown Bear untied Bjorn and handed him the food bowl.
Neither tried to speak. Bjorn wolfed down the corn and fish while Brown Bear sat
and watched his friend eat.
Rordan opened his eyes and gazed down at his previously bare feet now dressed
in gold slippers. His body was covered with brilliant, multicoloured feathers. Rordan
looked up to where a low ceiling had held him in darkness. The sky was filled with
stars. He extended his arms, no longer tied to the lodge pole behind his back and
effortlessly floated up, high above the captors’ village.
He flew with a myriad of birds of many colours, over forests, rivers, and great
expanses of desert landscape with deep canyons and pink sandstone plateaus.
He flew on between mountains capped with snow. Rordan glided above their
frosted solitude then down over a steamy jungle to a vast city on a lake. There
he saw exotic flowers and sparkling fountains and heard strange and beautiful
instrumental music. The birds led him on to another city on a hill. Here were
many pyramids of white and pink stone. People dressed in flowing robes of multicoloured
feathers moved up and down countless steps.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562826

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

Yannis Ritsos – Poems, Volume I

On the Eve of Autumn
The last vacationers sit in front of windows with
crossed arms
the few in love and dry leaves sit on benches
of gardens
When the coach was heard from the road
no one went down to open
only a dog came out of the door
and looked straight in the eyes of the afternoon
Perhaps she was in there the sick lady
who is always cold and holds a bouquet of violets
on her knees
It was she – the hotel manager said and spat out the window
Then he wiped his lips and closed the shutters

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562834

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

Medusa

Suits
Two identical suits
black pinstripes and vests
Clay reddish ties
snow-white shirts
ironed pants
worn by both men
gazing at the silent emptiness
One in a posh casket
surrounded by cheap flowers
The other in the office
surrounded by screens
data, stocks, charts, sales
beautified zombies
sleepwalking
In pinstripe suits
with vests, with ties
gazing at emptiness

https://draft2digital.com/book/3745982#print

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763769

Constantine Cavafy

Theatre of Sidon (400 A.D.)
Son of an honourable citizen, above all, handsome
ephebe of the theatre, pleasing in many ways,
I often compose very daring verses in Greek,
that I circulate, secretly most of the time.
Oh gods! That they won’t be seen
by the darkly clothed people, those who speak of morality
these verses are about a superior quality of carnal pleasure
leading to sterile love, often rejected.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562856

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

Yannis Ritsos – Poems, Volume VI

Dry Mouth
Fasting is not necessary, he said. I chewed my saliva,
ripped the bed sheet, knocked at the door, smelled
the wall, waited in the hallway, out of the stoa, and I stood
in the road. The night was falling late, later than the void
between two hands. The bus arrived, and all five of them
disembarked together. The woman’s kerchief fell.
The lights were still on; the ticket collector had long hair,
tickets, two drachma coins, and his secrets. The spotlight
hit the man with the black suit, who was coming from
the other side, the man I didn’t expect, yet he had my hat on
and held a basket with yellow apples.

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

Wheat Ears

Lantern
The lantern’s wisdom I embrace
and the narrow path in front
I unfold with all good inspiration
for the discovery of the one.
Sardonic laughter
ironic smiles short
ever short images of
stolen gazes
when a young sun struggles
to transform the world
into golden miracles.
Human banality
that overcomes
all the dreams of dreamers.
A lantern’s wisdom I present
to my feet
for my feet to follow perhaps
this morning perhaps today
I’ll find Him.
Perhaps this morning
I’ll find the one
who sees man like a man.
Perhaps today
I’ll get to meet the One
who doesn’t stay at the color
of garment or skin
who doesn’t esteem
the value of a bank account
or the number of missiles
pointed against the other man.
Tired footsteps in the agora and
and in the arena
and in the matador’s dreams
as I endure the ridicule of
the inexistent life forms
as I endure the pain of searching
for a piece of the endless blue sky.
Tired footsteps up the steep
face of daylight and the blind
hands of the moonlight.

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

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

Kariotakis-Polydouri, The Tragic Love Story

Return
Smile of the Gods, Bay of Saronikos, always great
blessing of our ship’s route
we could hear the roar of the high seas as easily as
the calmness of your depth
under the morning dew like a dove with its body’s
nonchalance: Athens
shivers and revels like a nymph that longs
for the faraway sun.
Because the sky shines, blonde mane of Pegasus,
Fate of the Parthenon
glass that Zeus keeps upside-down that the dream-light
is poured a flood
prodigal son, I return to you swaying like a flower
in the breeze
earth, sky and you, oh sea of Attica, to whom I owe all
my Songs!

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562951

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

Antony Fostieris – Selected Poems

Semblance of a Bird’s Chirp
A bitter bird chirps inside the wood.
Semblance of a bird
semblance of a chirp.
Perhaps a blackbird strike
the wood with its beak. It rains,
bird has no other refuge, chick-chick
on the window, the sound of the rain
only louder. However, there is no rain
nor window in the wood, only
darkness in its viscera and dry pus.
Other times, other birds on leaves
and branches. The blackbird: look at it,
it has found a way to wedge itself
intact
(From its beak down as a boat
in a Lilliputian bottle)
and always chick-chick and chick
hard to decipher sounds from
the invisible bird,
like when you hear
that God appeared, as in a miracle,
to His chosen people.

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

Jazz with Ella

excerpt

It was delicious and she washed it down with a sip from a tumbler full of what appeared to be neat spirit. She was sitting in the family’s combination living and dining room where the ornate, antique table was laden with small plates of food. Wise in the ways of Russian dining from having partied with Ukrainians and Polish, she knew that these were only the zakuski, the appetizers, and that a more substantial meal would follow. “No, really, now I’m full up.” At least the food is dampening the effects of the vodka, she thought. “How about you, Paul?”
The man referred to as Paul looked up from a plate of bread and sausage and smiled shyly. “Thank you. You are good hosts,” he murmured.
“Your Russian is so good. Did you study long in university?” asked Marta of Paul while Misha seemed distracted and regarded Jennifer solemnly. Paul-Volodya did not reply right away and Marta was interrupted by the sound of something bubbling on the stove. The afternoon so far had been wonderful, full of affectionate hugs and cheerful toasts toward Jennifer, friendship in which she reciprocated and in which Paul had been generously included. Their daughter, Nadya, was at school but the couple promised that she would return home very soon.
After refreshment, the cousins had spoken of their own hopes to leave the Soviet Union and live in Canada. The nervousness with which they raised the topic and the intensity with which they spoke made Jennifer realize how important this move was to them. They would need help and support in Canada. She didn’t know much about Canadian immigration laws, but wouldn’t they need a sponsor? Someone from within the country—a relative who would vouch for them, promise to provide for them? She thought at first of her mother as the closest relative but had an uneasy feeling these two were grooming their newfound cousin for the role.
Yet nagging questions persisted. Were they truly related to her? She wondered at their eagerness. They seemed to have everything here: a private apartment of their own, not too big but with a balcony that gave a view of the playground opposite. Their daughter enjoyed school and Young Pioneers, they said, and they were both working, he as a technician and she as a bus driver. This last gave Jennifer pause as she tried to envision the dainty, polite Marta in the driver’s seat of a soot-black, fume-spewing bus, but she knew that the Soviet Union was ahead of the west in ensuring women joined the work force in many non-traditional jobs. Marta worked shifts so was off-duty right now…

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562892

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