The Unquiet Land

excerpt

The bottle had been opened but little drunk from it. “As you can see, I haven’t been overindulging.” He pulled the cork out of the neck, poured two glasses and handed one to Caitlin.
“Thank you, Padraig.” As Caitlin placed the glass of wine on the table beside her, she noticed an old, soiled envelope. “This is addressed to my father,” she said, turning to look at Padraig.
“Yes, your father gave it to me when I left Corrymore to go to university.”
“You’ve kept it all this time?” Caitlin idly picked up the envelope.
“Yes. Seven years I’ve had it. You can read the letter if you wish.”
“No, not if it’s personal.”
“No, it is nothing private or secret that you have no right to read. It is addressed to your father after all, not to me.” Padraig took the envelope from Caitlin, removed the letter from inside and unfolded it. “It makes for rather disturbing reading though.”
Intrigued, Caitlin accepted the letter from Padraig and started to read with difficulty the untidy scrawl in which the letter was written. It was dated “Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty, Scotland, 11th March, 1902.” Caitlin turned to the last of the letter’s several pages; it was signed by Dr. Hamish Graham.
Dear Mr MacLir,
Thank you for your letter of 2nd ult. I apologise for my tardy reply but my practice has been busy of late, as is not unusual at this time of year. You requested any information I might have concerning the boy Padraig, over and above what little I was able to communicate to you during our brief meeting in November. You tell me that you have formally adopted Padraig as your son, so I can appreciate your desire to learn more about the laddie. However, until the month of July, 1899, we knew very little, not even his surname which he refused to divulge for fear, I believe, of being returned to the care of his uncle from which he and his mother had been so cruelly expelled. That part of Padraig’s unhappy history you are already familiar with.
What transpired in the month of July following Padraig’s arrival in Kyle was a disturbing court case in which a farm labourer from a community twelve statute miles from Plockton, a man of well-established bad character, was tried and convicted to hang for the brutal rape and strangulation of a vagrant woman who had been given permission to sleep in the hay in a barn belonging to this man’s employer. At the rapist’s trial, about which I read in several newspapers, both local and national, it was revealed that the woman’s father, the Rev. Magnus MacArtan,

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Nikos Engonopoulos – Poems

the day passes
the hour passes
society laughs
the excuses are retained
yet, the one who committed
the crime and went to sleep
didn’t sense
that dawn came and he woke up
and walked about
in the horrible darkness of death
(his mouth is already full of dirt)
and of the one who lied
and acted unjustly
and slapped
they will pay for it and their children
will do so too
up to the fifth generation
there is God
hearts and kidneys are examined
and next to the crippled justice of man
the Fury hides
nested deep in the guilty man
merciless and unforgiving
who doesn’t care about officialities and titles
that good life brings but in God’s name,
it doesn’t care and it punishes
harshly
the brainless and timid who commit

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Orange

Heat Wave
Soft island hills
lapping on sea froth
cicadas fire up
their endless arias
come close to me, you said,
stand before me like Hermes
a naked graceful cypress
so that I’ll keep you
in my eyes for
the long winter days
when we’ll be apart
moments I’ll
yearn for your warmth
do come to me, I beg you
let me touch your skin
the day is fiery
and unbearable like
the body’s conflagration

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Katerina Anghelaki Rooke – Selected Poems

The Initiate
The initiate dressed in white always dwells in caves
and the oleanders behind him will turn red
the pebbles will be sprinkled with holy rain
and the whole gorge that follows.
I also go near with my serpent-self
the estuary of passion.
my soles, the last lovers,
carry me lightly
as if I had no heaviness in my consciousness.
The one who attracts me stops, thin,
dressed in white and having a ponytail;
he smells a strong odor like devil rosemary
while he exhumes the beautiful fragrance of a dead angel.
The leafage of the carob-tree
hides something quivering and invisible
felt only by that quivering and invisible sense
that we have inside us.
The initiate is very thin;
his pants only balloon a little
in the front and a little in the back
while airy flesh fills his shirt.
The sponsor of earth lowered me,
with the unanswered questions in my tongue,
to a cave that instead of a mouth
had a hole in the sky.
Under it stood
the provider of the inconceivable
who milked the light-blue
with his palms turned upwards.
He stirred a little;
was perhaps the unforeseen from above
that pushed him
or the earth, slave of precision
that shook him from his foundations?

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