In the Quiet After Slaughter

excerpt

– There’s something about these chips, Mr. Cameron says.
– Not as good, are they? Mrs. Cameron agrees. Aren’t as crunchy
as ours.
– Nowhere near, Reggie Cameron replies. He extends an open
hand for further testing.
In the back seat, Larry lifts a buttock and releases a burst of sharp
anal burps. He elbows me and says, Do your parents allow you to
behave this way at home?
The postman reported seeing a naked woman in the park. Later she
was spotted atop the Kennedys’ garage. She twisted her ankle in the
jump. A crowd gathered.
– Get the butterfly net! someone cackled. It’s escaped again!
Almost everyone laughed.
After the ambulance had left and the looky-loos dispersed, Mrs.
Cameron knocked on our door. Kids had nicknamed her Meat on
account of her bulk.
Camping will do the boy good, she told my dad. The two of them
sat on the stairs watching her Reg give the Impala a good scrubbing.
He buffed the chrome until it gleamed.
– I used to be a little nutty myself, she said.
We got one of the last campsites at Oceanview Resorts in Birch Bay.
Mr. Cameron pitched a family-size tent while Mrs. Cameron barbecued
some burgers. Larry and I erected a nylon pup tent.
– If I get any broads in here, Larry said, you’ll have to take a walk.
We lifted our bicycles from the roof rack and took a spin. Some of
the other vacationers had motorhomes and vans, but many, like the
Camerons, were sleeping under canvas. Most vehicles at the campsite
bore Canuck plates.
After lunch we drove into town. Birch Bay consists of a smattering
of stores and clapboard cottages facing Juan de Fuca Strait. Droves
of oiled tourists fanned out on the sand. The main road was clogged
with slow-moving cars blasting loud music.
Well it’s been building up inside of me
For oh I don’t know how long . . .
We parked the car and fell in with the procession of shoppers.

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https://www.amazon.com/dp/0980897971

Yannis Ritsos – Poems, Volume I

Ocean’s March

Night The invisible mountain range at a distance
I stand in the black frame of the door
and call the name of God
in the snowstorm of stars
amid the diaphanous shadow of people
who sleep and die
in the wilderness which recasts my voice
into thousands of voices
Where did they all go leaving me here
to stare at my empty palms
to keep company to silence and rain?
Deeply grieved up to the point of death
I see the desolate sky
and I salute a big cloud
and I am like a sad little lamb
that they left alone
in the dark valley
Oh God why have they all left from my side?
In my ripped clothes
I have a tender heart
made of birds and flowers
(How many nights I cried secretly
for the wound of the butterfly)
Let all leave Let all leave
I will again stay
opposite the wide sky
opposite the great sea
without bitterness and grumble
and I shall sing
Let all leave
The more I stay alone
the closer to people I get
the closer I am to God

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Prairie Roots

excerpt

ridiculously low prices; even the children may not have fetched
much, being offspring of immigrants. Life was indeed a struggle,
as the first four boys arrived into their care.
My initial memories of that farm include a vague vision of a gray
two-storey frame house and chickens all over the yard. The chickens
I remember looking at in some puzzlement, from an upstairs
bedroom window, and wondering as to their relationship to me. I
also remember the big blocks of “relief” cheese which mother sliced
on the kitchen table; however, I do not remember whether or not I
liked it. It seemed to me that the weather was always sunny, perhaps
because we were only let out when the sun shone.
My most vivid early memory is associated with the 1938
Beeston school Christmas concert at which time I was three and a
half years old, having been born in May of 1935. I remember not
the concert itself, having slept through most of it, but being awakened
in my Uncle Mike’s arms by the noise of Santa’s arrival. Obviously
my name was called and my Uncle hastened forward with
me to see Santa, who scared me half to death before presenting me
with a red toy truck. I have liked trucks and have been leery of
long-haired men ever since!
We lived in our home until the spring of 1940 at which time my
parents bought a 320 acre tract of virgin land from the Hudson Bay
Company, seven and one half miles north of Hubbard. Where is Hubbard,
you ask? Half way between Goodeve and Ituna or, to locate it another
way, about 100 miles northeast of Regina. The new land had not seen a
plough. The neighbors had pastured cattle on it over the years, otherwise
not a tree had been cut nor a stone picked. All this was about to change.
But first a house had to be built to …

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https://www.amazon.com/dp/0980897920

The Incidentals

Emotionless
The seething angst of lust spreading
unwillingly over hierodule’s skin
unaccustomed to feeling emotion, unable
to participate in the lovemaking
she had only to provide, a vessel
she was at the altar of Aphrodite
a useful female at the pleasure of
men visiting, men always visit a
temple standing by the hillside, men
always seeking the seething lust
in burning flesh of the hierodule
who performs her duty to the lustful
Goddess asking for nothing but
their due honor as free servants,
no royalties paid or asked for, no
penalties charged on unappreciative
males who cared about their satisfaction
and left the pleasure of female
or her Goddess to the hands of
elements scheming their revolution
the seething angst of lust demands
her body’s contours and dark caves
on the altar of Aphrodite deserving
unemotional dedication, like any
archon sitting up high, like any God
jealous or self-absorbed and relaxed
and truly the hierodule too will
one day sit at the big table
of the selected few, one day
she too will be named the heroine
of the goddess wasn’t she after all another
true believer? Wasn’t she too a true
little unrepentant Christian?

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Γεράσιμος Λυκιαρδόπουλος, Βαρκελώνη