Jeff straightened up and took a deep breath. “Maybe you’d better go in now,” he said hoarsely. “She was asking for you earlier. She’s in room one.” Tyne patted his hand and got to her feet. “I’ll let you know what Dr. Dunston says, Dad.” A brief nod was the only sign that he heard her. She turned away and headed for the corridor leading to the two private rooms in the building. She was not surprised her aunt had been put into a private ward; after all, no one deserved it more. Millie Harper had been a tireless advocate and worker for the hospital since before it had been on the drawing board. Tyne remembered her own brief stint on her aunt’s committee during the building year. She had come home from Calgary to nurse her dad back to health following his stroke, and Millie had recruited her for the Building & Furnishing committee. Since then Millie had been a fixture on the board of the Emblem hospital, at times serving under Morley’s chairmanship. Tyne stopped before the door which bore the room number and a plaque with the name of the donor who had furnished it. She could hear low voices which stopped when she tapped lightly. The door opened to reveal her mother, an anxious look on her pale face. “Oh, Tyne, come in. Dr. Dunston is here.” She stood aside to let Tyne enter. Grant Dunston raised his head. “Hello, Tyne.” Then he turned his attention back to Millie Harper who lay quietly in the bed, her eyes closed. Tyne was conscious of two disturbing thoughts, the first that Dr. Dunston had seldom greeted her in any other way than with his usual cheery, “Hi, sis.” Her second thought was that the woman in the bed, frail and ashen-faced, was hardly recognizable as her beloved aunt. Her heart in her throat, Tyne made her way to the bedside and gently took hold of the cool hand that lay motionless on top of the covers. Millie opened her eyes and a flicker of a smile made her lips twitch.
II An embarrassed cloud hovers between the horizon’s arms which forsake the colourful rainbows and the frost of a shiver when the young poet enters with his avalanche of bluish creativity attending to the dandelion’s flexing with arms widely stretched to the crystal stars and beyond the young poet now enters with words written on stone with words engraved on paper; wisdom in the process of learning the unconditioned young poet now enters mesmerized by the chamomile’s yellow tear dazzled by the chickadee’s melody giving all his sunlit presents as always compassion and emotions heightened in the arms of love for the infinitesimal for every preceding form, the poet now enters while metal birds filled with sulfur and brimstone like furies from a bygone era attack and destroy the highest ziggurats.
Ionia Ionia was lost forever in 1922 Ionia, a spring and a mother. Think of the silent deeds that stand by us when we become conscious of the great pain deeds of man and the mountains take form slowly in such a way grievance isn’t for Greece but for history. How often power hidden in the mystery of life turns its face away from the honest works of man before the decay that confronts and spreads like the frozen and parched gust of winter the longing of the Greek and the Turk’s arrogance fade away. Both alike the sun and the cloud that together sink and dissolve in the night in the great night. In Ionia one can meet us you and I and the black headscarf of the grandmother. One can see the made of oak boat of Odysseus the vendetta of stony Mani and Markos Mpotsaris’ Laka-Souli the voice that became Logos or the playful waves accentuated by star matter thickening the columns of the temple. In Ionia man tried to create the face of god and at last he created his own thoughtful face.
Lamb, frosty lamb short poem take me by the hand; dawn has its thorn and its stool. Let us believe until evening comes. Moon, take off your shoes I can’t sleep on my back if I’ll turn to my side I’ll hurt. The door is open I can’t leave.
Unanswered Love That lonely tree on the mountaintop is an unanswered love it grows old ravaged by the wind and loneliness it never knows the rustle of the forest during the night it still insists to become a wave, a by-chance monogram, tattoo of the dream, it dives deep into the end of the horizon it transforms into a myth and distances itself flapping its wings to the voice that calls it while before the body departs it writes echoes of vibrations in the air heavenly contours of reflections
As they walked around the ramshackle town, whose only buildings of note were the grand churches of competing denominations, he described his first sight of the place and how he had come to buy food for the people who were to become his family. An Inuk man, named Amy Ahangona, asked them to have tea at his home. As they walked toward his house, people smiled and nodded. Amy explained that the people in the Arctic knew about Isumataq and about the spotlight of attention Ken had been focussing on the story of the Inuit. “What can we do to help?” he asked. Ken made one request. Could Amy take them out on the Coppermine River? They spent a day on Amy’s boat, motoring up the river to Copper Mountain where the natives had mined the yellow mineral and beaten it into knives, and had thus become known as the Yellow Knives. They went to Bloody Falls where Ken stood on the same boulder he had straddled when he first crossed from the western into the eastern Arctic. He saw again the boulder where Samuel Hearne had carved his name in the sixteen hundreds and felt the emotional rush of history overwhelm him. From Coppermine, they flew to Rankin Inlet where they discovered that Keith had asked Michael to spend the summer at his camp, working as a guide. They flew across Hudson’s Bay, east to Iqaluit (Frobisher Bay), another ramshackle settlement, except for the new high school in the shape of a giant igloo. They continued on to Pangirtung, an ancient settlement at the far end of Cumberland Sound on Baffin Island, where the Inuit had made camps for many centuries. But, it was also an old European whaling station and remains of the industry and skeletons of giant blue whales were still scattered on the shore. They visited the local high school, where Ken gave a talk. When one young student asked him what he would do with Isumataq when it was finished, he said he wanted not one opening as was common with works of art – he wanted many openings, all of them to take place across the Arctic. Yes, the student persisted, but where would he show it first. “Well, first I have to take it to Parliament,” he said. Afterwards, Karen said. “I’ve never heard you say that before. What’s this idea of going to Parliament?” “It was just a joke,” he said. “It just came off the top of my head.” “Some joke! It’s perfect.” “Maybe.” “Seriously – it’s perfect. That’s it!” “First I want to bring it here.” “Fine, but I tell you I love it – I love it a lot more than your crazy idea of going to Rome and unveiling it in the Colosseum with a pair of lions.
Knife In the talons of fear, all his life, a hell, a schism into which he hid his pride, an apostate in the rocky face of normality he promised to protect his body from darkness his imagination always created his psyche constantly on alert when fearful of all others he raised the knife to defend himself from the innocence of his victim in the body of who the knife dived proving the short truth that only evil can control a man, only the blood of innocent can justify the unnatural existence of the killer on earth he too settled on what his foul mind led him to spend his life imagining that he was human.
Pip: Manolis Aligizakis has been quietly building one of the more ambitious translation and publishing projects in contemporary poetry — and this week's posts from vequinox make that scope impossible to ignore.
Mara: We're covering two stretches of territory today: the Modern Greek poetry tradition, from Ritsos to Seferis to Patrikios, and the narrative fiction side of the site, with excerpts ranging from small-town drama to historical adventure.
Pip: Plus a short stop in the territory where longing and unrest do most of their best work — which, it turns out, overlaps with both.
Mara: Let's start with the poetry.
Greek Voices, From Guilt to Glory
Mara: This segment is about what Modern Greek poetry actually does — how it moves between the intimate and the historical, the personal guilt of a single speaker and the collective weight of a whole tradition.
Pip: The Yannis Ritsos post, from Poems Volume II, opens with a poem called "Suspicious Sleep," and it sets that tone immediately. The setup is a small, almost domestic guilt — a star announcing happiness, a fruit seller's voice — and then the speaker turns inward: "You felt guilty because you didn't have the urge to respond. If you at least hadn't seen, hadn't understood. Guilty, not counting the guilt of others. You, all alone, put all the responsibility on your shoulders and you understood all your innocence."
Mara: The consequence there is the paradox at the heart of a lot of this poetry — that full awareness of your own innocence arrives only after you've already accepted total responsibility. That's not a comfortable place to rest.
Pip: Ritsos Volume IV, "Maturity," goes the other direction — outward, chaotic, guards running, flags lowered, and a crowd that can't decide whether it's laughing or crying. The intimacy is gone; what's left is noise and doubt.
Mara: The Tasos Livaditis post, Selected Poems, is warmer — a spring morning, flour on lips, a name written on steamed windows. The Kariotakis-Polydouri piece, "The Tragic Love Story," pulls the other way: bells that spread evil, a prayer to beauty, an untimely death. George Seferis's collected poems land somewhere between — "a great sun greater than light," the garden between equinoxes, but arrived at only after staring into a black cloth.
Pip: Titos Patrikios writes a love made of "bones of our dead comrades" and "a black wind that spreads its fiery metal on words, in jails and exile camps." That's a tradition that has earned its darkness.
Mara: The anthology post, Neo-Hellene Poets, gives the broader frame — voices across generations asking the same question: "Why does our joy, our little joy, to sadness only lead us?" Antony Fostieris, Katerina Anghelaki Rooke, the collections Impulses, Marginal, and Wheat Ears all circle that same tension between sensation and loss.
Pip: And then the fiction asks it differently — through plot.
Stories Under Pressure
Mara: The fiction excerpts this week span centuries and continents, but they share a structural pressure: characters navigating power, prejudice, and survival in confined spaces — a chair across a mayor's desk, a ship in plague, a monk tied to a stake.
Pip: Fury of the Wind opens that territory with a scene that looks domestic and turns out to be a confrontation about social standing. Will Andrews has put a woman named Sarah Fielding to work alongside the town women, and his wife Molly is furious. The exchange lands here: "Then it would be their loss, not mine. Anyway, none of you even know Sarah. What've you got against her except that she married Ben Fielding?" And Molly's answer — "She married Ben Fielding, and only a coarse woman or a slut would have considered doing that" — is the whole town's prejudice compressed into one line.
Mara: What this means in practice is that Will is fighting a social order that has already decided the verdict. His mild needling doesn't move it; Molly slams the door, and he's left muttering at his papers. The power isn't in the argument — it's in the silence that follows.
Pip: Poodie James runs a similar dynamic at higher stakes. Engine Fred sits across from a mayor named Torgerson and tells him, quietly, that he knows what Torgerson did twenty-one years ago. Torgerson's defense is pure contempt: "He's a freak, an unclean little freak. He contaminates the town." The machinery of official cruelty, dressed as civic concern.
Mara: In Turbulent Times opens differently — a birthday drive through the Irish countryside in a new Bentley, stories of drumlins and dolmens, a hotel dinner. The ease of that scene is doing work; it establishes exactly the kind of world that turbulence will later disrupt.
Pip: Blood, Feathers and Holy Men puts Brother Rordan tied to a pole, a burning bough at his scalp, a painted warrior demanding he sing. He chooses the Salve Regina. That's not a metaphor — it's a man deciding what he is in the worst moment available.
Mara: The two Arrows excerpts — posted on different days but from the same novel — follow a narrator navigating the Spanish Inquisition, protecting a plague-stricken captain and outwitting an inquisitor with a well-placed mention of the king. The stakes in both are life and death, and the tool is language used precisely under pressure.
Pip: Small Change is quieter — a boy sent home from choir practice for looking at stained glass windows, explaining to his mother that the other kids are slow. The Circle is quieter still: a retired admiral visiting his sister's vegetable garden, at peace with himself for reasons he can't yet explain aloud.
Mara: Swamped and Straits and Turns round out the range — one a business negotiation over wine, warrants, and commissions; the other a solitary traveler burying a wolf with stones and walking away smiling. Hours of the Stars adds a poem in the mix, a Roman galley caught in the Euroclydon wind, cargo thrown overboard, salvation uncertain.
Pip: Cloe and Alexandra sits at the edge of both fiction and lyric — a poem that asks what "I wish you the best" actually means, and answers: probably not much. Which is its own kind of pressure.
Mara: That question — what words mean when feeling has already left the building — is exactly where the longing segment picks up.
When Longing Outlasts Its Object
Pip: This is the territory where the poems aren't about a tradition or a history — they're about the specific ache of wanting something that has already shifted into absence.
Mara: Cloe and Alexandra frames it as a linguistic problem: "Would have been better if he wrote: 'Sorry that I couldn't?'" The polite farewell as evasion — the nine-headed monster of circumstance doing the work the speaker won't do.
Pip: Marginal puts the same absence in physical terms: "night laments her dark role in the photosynthesis of your absence." That's longing metabolized into the body's own chemistry.
Mara: Katerina Anghelaki Rooke's selected poems move through environmental grief into something stranger — horror at the destruction of forests that "strangely mixes with elation" when the ego finally releases its grip. Tasos Livaditis, Poems Volume II, carries a grief that leaves no footprints. Titos Patrikios turns it political. The Neo-Hellene anthology, Antony Fostieris, George Seferis, and Kariotakis-Polydouri all ask the same question from different angles: what do we do with what we cannot stop feeling?
Pip: Impulses answers with a sculptor making everything too large — hands big enough to embrace the world, legs to straddle the universe. Overcorrection as grief's own logic.
Mara: The fiction excerpts were asking the same thing. The ideas don't stop at genre lines.
Pip: What stays with me is how much of this — the poetry, the fiction, the longing — is about the gap between what language can carry and what it can't.
Mara: The next episode will likely push further into that same territory. There's more to cover.
I put my hands in my pockets and took them out. We walked silently. But what could one say when the world is so bright and your eyes so big? A boy, at the corner of the street, sang about his lemonade. We split one, and the swallow that suddenly flew by your hair, what did it say to you? Your hair was so nice. Impossible, it must have said something to you. The hotel was small and in an old neighbourhood next to the train station and we saw them manoeuvring the trains in the glare. Truly, that spring, that morning, that simple, happy room where I held your naked body for the first time the tears that I couldn’t hold back at the end, how they suited you. Ah, our home was warm back then, our lamp was joyous the world was so great. The fried oil smelled in the kitchen. I bent to kiss your hands, which were full of flour, my lips would turn white. Then I kissed your lips that got full of flour too. We looked at each other and laughed. Spring said good evening to us through the open window A girl sang at the opposite window. It was so nice to be alive. Then the rain started. I wrote your name on all our steamed-up windows so that we could get a piece of clear sky in our room.
“I’m in, Mario … but on my terms.” “Thank you, Eteo. I knew I could count on you … and yes, your terms” They clinked glasses and sipped their wine in silence. “What prospectus would you like, Eteo?” Mario asked. “How much do you need for your program?” “Three hundred thousand. Some working capital for a year, minimum things. I have no other obligations or debts.” “Okay, let’s say a million and a half shares at fifty. Give me eight cents commission and my warrants, which you’ll take out at a good profit, say fifty cents?” “Hey Eteo, that’s too much. I’ll cross them out at eighty,” Mario interjected. “You’ll cross them out at ninety, nothing less, and as early as possible. If it starts running, I’m not pushing it down,” Eteo insisted. “Deal,” Mario replied. “I’ll take care of the details, and I’ll have the prospectus on your desk by the day after tomorrow.” Mario took another sip of his wine, then asked, “By the way, how’s Logan doing these days?” “Learning the ropes, just like anybody else, Mario.” “That’s great. I hear good things about him.” “Thank you, Mario. How’s your family, the girls and Lynda?” “They are all good, Eteo” “Are you still living in Caulfield?” “Yes, I’ve always like it there. I see Jimmy the carpenter quite often.” “Good old Jimmy. Well, say hello to Lynda for me. Don’t forget, okay?” “Of course.” Mario stood up. “Thank you, Eteo.” He shook Eteo’s hand and kept it in his for a few extra seconds. “I hope we’ll see each other more often from now on.” “We shall, Mario. By the way, I like your jacket. From Georgio’s, I suppose.”