George Seferis-Collected Poems

Agianapa II

            Verses for music

Under the old sycamore

wildly the wind played

with the birds with the branches

but never spoke to us.

Welcome, breath of my soul

we opened our hearts

come inside come and drink

from our desire.

Under the old sycamore

the wind got up and left

to the castles of the north and never touched us.

Oh my thyme and rosemary hold your breast tightly

and find cave and find a den

and hide your oil lamp.

This isn’t wind of Palm Sunday

it isn’t of the Resurrection

but it’s wind of fire and smoke

and of the joyless life

Under the old sycamore

dry the wind returned

it sniffed gold coins everywhere

and it sold us out.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B096TTS37J

Yannis Ritsos – Poems, Volume IV

THE GATE

(Excerpt 7)

I wait for the three women, and the fourth one;

they might not come; I wait for them;

the bicycle is in the basement

the chicken walked in the shop with the big saw;

the man grabbed it by the leg; the chicken cawed

I don’t know whether all saws have the same number

             of teeth like people;

I wait, I didn’t give up, didn’t cross my arms,

oh, my old women, my old women, he said,

you who burned your two feathers one by one

over the flame of the oil lamp or the fire of the hearth

not in the fire of half of the city — the bone inside

              still whole

to poke your back, so you’ll graze like runaway mares

oh the nights, with the mid-night cries of the dead,

the howls of dogs and wolves,

with the scratched skin of the moon nailed on doors

with the mirror, the glass door, the river, all angry

             in the pitch dark

that we couldn’t notice the severed head of your son

             in the laundry basket;

you’ll freeze at dawn — moist eaves stuck on your

             soles

thistle poked through your dresses, entangled in

             your hair

when the first explosions are heard in the gorge

and the statue tumbles as his testicles stir and

the mule drivers carry double sacks of whitewash

             on their mules

marking the path with two white lines up to the

              hill

high up by the half built church with the half

given forgiveness weighing heavy the olive grove

              with what the bells didn’t chime.

The others, still shuffling the cards, argued about

               various scenarios;

I left their company, sat by the window; I wasn’t

                listening to their complains,

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CGX139M6