Yannis Ritsos – Poems, Selected Books, Volume IV

REPETITIONS SECOND SERIES

The End of Dodoni I

We had the altars, our churches, the oracles. With

our own eyes we had seen the golden she-dove and

the axe of the lumberjack falling on the ground. Secret

voices — the leaves, the birds and the fountain, told us

what to do, what not to. The enchantresses with their

cauldrons and the coffee cup were a good support. And

over the deep-voiced oak.

                                    We too had somewhere to go, to

ask about the sheep, our children, the pomegranate tree,

the one-eyed cow; about the donkey, the orchard,

the casserole. And always the same answer, (as it changed

each time it was given in the same tone:) certain, firm,

commanding, irreversible. We relaxed somewhat —

others had the responsibility of deciding for success or

failure. We only had the submission and execution, and

our lowered eyes.

                            Now

everything is reversed, altars, churches, cemeteries.

The bones thrown in the street. They burned down

the holy oak — our confidant. We have no one to ask,

no one to trust. Arkis walks around the agora with the

bloodied axe on his waist; there is no golden fluff from

the sacrificed oracle-giving dove that shivers on the kitchen

skylight or on the dusty oleanders; only the denial water

that drips in the empty stable late at night, and it is quiet

an ambivalent quietness like the first one, like the last.

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