Tasos Livaditis – Poems, Volume II

Long-listed for the 2023 Griffin Poetry Awards

Oh God, there are all so uncertain like a stone with
no mystery or
like the one who rediscovers his lost money in
the wasted time. Travellers bring some flowers
to the hasty funerals in train stations, while
beggars run for a few coins behind ballooned
outfits.
Oh, if I could have my own telephone booth or
cleaner false teeth perhaps many killings could have
been avoided
or perhaps they would had been noticed before
they took place. Everything else will remain unknown
like a sudden ring of the bell from someone who has
already gone away;
a light smell that vanished before you could remember
some steam from your childhood chamomile
that many natural disasters haven’t dispersed yet.
Oh, if I had the power, I could make a hand for each
street beggar
or easy puzzles for the exhausted;
I could create a talkative cemetery that each evening
would narrate old stories to us
or I’d put the bed-sheets out to air like in a shipwreck.
Therefore I am crossed out
like the miracle that makes life more uncertain.

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HEAR ME OUT

Salome
The guards brought to her his head on a silver platter.
His eyes shut as if dreaming and his lips still warm. Drop of blood, dripped from his severed neck, a stain onto the white sheet that wrapped his head. She took in her hands the lifeless face, neared hers to the still warm lips, leaned down and kissed them. Her face had an expression of desperation along with satanic satisfaction.
“I after all kissed your lips, John” she whispered, her eyes full of tears; “I had to have you killed, but I kissed them.”
To what extend the passion and craziness of love can reach, my love?
You got up from the table and got ready to leave.
Could I have killed you to have you totally mine?
But instead I picked the used plates, your glass I brought it lustfully, slowly close to my lips I licked its circumference and finally, with an indescribable satisfaction I drank the last drop of wine left in it.
Perhaps I didn’t kiss you good night however that last drop from your glass was equally satisfying as the seven veils of Salome’s dance.

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Still Waters

excerpt

Tyne pursed her lips and looked down at the table. Several seconds
passed in silence while she moved her mug of tea in circles in front
of her. Then she looked up. “All right, Auntie, tell me what I’ll have
to do.” She could not hide the excitement in her voice. 
She attended her first meeting of the Furnishings Committee of
the Emblem & District Hospital the following Thursday evening at
Millie’s home. Three other members greeted Tyne with enthusiasm.
“Your help will be invaluable, Tyne,” Laura Charters said. “I’m so
glad your aunt persuaded you to come. How’s your dad, by the way?”
“He’s doing well, thank you,” Tyne told the mother of the girl who
had been her best friend through high school. “He’s determined to
fight this thing, so that helps.”
Jennifer Sears, a young school teacher whom Tyne had not previously
met, nodded her head in agreement. “I’m pleased to hear he’s
getting better, Tyne. I met him when he came to see me about Jeremy’s
grades. I like your dad.”
Goodness, could this be one of Jeremy’s teachers? She looked far
too young.
The third member of the committee was the wife of the Royal
Bank manager. Edith Siebold was getting on in years being, it was
said, at least ten years older than her husband. Tyne had always had
the greatest respect for her, and regarded her as one of the most
charming and cultured women she knew.
Tyne helped her aunt serve coffee as the women gathered around
the kitchen table. Then Millie called the meeting to order. Catalogues
with information on everything from hospital beds to overbed tables
to stainless steel supply carts were spread out over the Formica top.
Even after the first hour Tyne was overwhelmed by the number
of decisions and the amount of research the committee had to face.
She wondered how they even knew where to begin, but was pleased
when, a number of times throughout the evening, they called on her
for advice.
“After all,” Laura Charters pointed out, “who is better equipped to
deal with these things than a recently graduated nurse?”

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Chthonian Bodies

Didascalic
Persephone’s abode
summer and spring
this thicket
the beetle’s kingdom and
locust’s schoolyard
beasts of the microcosm and
a dividing line, painter’s
brush stroke
limiting the underworld
where the queen slumbers for
six months, a line
between two heartbeats
an alive chthonian body
a corpse on the other side and
the pond’s role: to keep
guard of lines invisible
yet distinct and separating
one death from the next

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