Poems selected
and translated from the Greek
by Yiannis Goumas
Self-knowledge
How
much longer will you poets stay awake?
Were you to spend a thousand evenings
and yet another thousand
starlit nights
you’ll always have in you what grieves you:
empty glasses
and fingers scratched by
cruel verses.
Your distant lands will always be built on
myth
and prayers will lie in
ambush for yesterday
hanging on their shoulders
the saviours’ lovely arrow cases.
And who am I to talk?
A faceless usher of dreams.
By birth
Rough chest- thorns have grown
inside the shirt
the skin is copper-coloured
and the ribs are dry walls in barren
fields.
His mind was ruined in this place
and the province
a merciless, loveless mother of a
thousand and one deaths
and secret ledgers under the bridal
bedclothes
turns the key
locking her lads out of the house.
He walked alone for long
alone he dug the earth till his nails
bled
but never did he breathe the clear
sky
and the “being” of this world
like a castaway by birth
abandoned by roads and sweaty
distances
he keeps on twisting and turning
in the grave dug by our stubbornness.
His mind was ruined
in his chest thorns have grown.
Colchis
We set out in the world
each one looking for what‘s in store
for him.
You say it’s in the war that you look
for a kiss
and I tell you it’s the thousand
years
that I’m drunk on a wooden mast
a wet rag, eyes dried northwards
hands clutching the rope of a
subterranean truth
that I may seek a footprint of yours.
Poor writings of another parody.
We set out in the world
looking for discoloured railings
and the ghosts of a youth and a
sullen spring
brows puckered up and loving
stray dogs basement bums
who never rested on spread out arms
what our need begets
and what only time can offer.
We set out in the world
each one getting what he deserves
and Colchis is taking years to
appear.
Plural
Vivid are the colours hanging on
walls
familiar scenes of past decades
oozing tobacco smoke
of incessant tight-mouthed puffing
and compulsive looks
eyes that have forsaken their morning
star
and meet in low dim lights.
Friends as always the unfamiliar
habitués
who keep on introducing themselves
when they are short of drinks
hands extended
friends who always part a couple of
hours before dawn
on the dirty steps of some memory.
Vivid are the colours hanging on
walls
girls worn out
with serving coloured water all night
long
in glasses cracked by endless
clinking
changing names on chafed lips
now wipe our life like wiping a
table;
on their hands the lines of battle
and the cloth wet with hidden
memories.
Vivid are the colours
and like our years they hang shyly on
verses.
Paranoia
I am looking forward to a paranoia
ignoring what the big shots have to
say.
Verses residing in our bodies
have fractured our joints
and draw blood from the unsealed
veins.
That’s why I am looking forward
to opening a way with the sword of
love affairs
and a lasting wish given on first of
April
wholesale
or a bit from your own grim fall
as a land barren from origin
never fortunate to suffer unjust
slavery.
Tyrannically I look forward
¾ are you at least listening to me? ¾
and I’m relieved by the downfall of
certain young hopefuls
unlined palms dig things to come
and pull down from scratch the ages’
truths
as if souls never sweat
or are in the habit of fasting love
underground.
So I am looking forward
and though I possess a book of
paranoias
I know that tomorrow the litany will
end
and everyone will be interred looking
at their watches.
Time remains the same
Fooled by time
and the deep cuts of a myrrh-bearing
spring
we walk up the stairs.
On our shoulders
pallid mourning and assortments of
cheap
bygone tears
and questions left unanswered by
human eyes.
In our hands
oars fastened with shrouds of
Columbus’ galley
that someone else had first sailed
her to the west
in his heart hanging
a load of curses by an enslaved,
total generation.
At our feet
drag years in chains
scraped and trampled on a thousand
times
begging like old women for some
nostalgia
before passing away
clinging to the faded footprints.
How many more stairs remain?
How many years?
Well, either here or in Hades
time remains the same.
Cello
I want a cello to be playing for me
as I pass away
and a moon that knows how to pace
and in addition
a maestro to put an end to what
begins
and show me at last
a few of the end’s tools
something of what in life I
avoid.
Like a wrong story
The young who grew into men just now
have for a haunt the haunt of old
timers
they sit quietly at the bar
and order their mirror on the rocks;
good old symbolisms bygone jokes
and casual music for dried up tastes.
They roll the years without filter
and for paper they wrap indispensable
poems
changing their rhymes and their “don’ts”.
They look suspiciously
they have their fishhook lying by the
door
fully aware who’s coming and who’s
waylaying.
From an early age they had read the
story
lots of waste and no answer.
When will a breath soothe their
bodies?
They write with earth and erase with
rain
they are soaked working their papers
by hand
but the pencil tireless on a straight
course
for us an unruly plough
disciplined to them.
The young who grew into men just now
roll the years without filter
and look at us suspiciously like a
wrong story.
Parenthesis
My withered loves
smell of sulphur, their breaths of
alcohol.
Boats made fast on the pier of a day
awake with a start
and faded by the midday sun
like a book I laid aside years
ago
and remember but little now
sighing deeply and rubbing my eyes.
My withered loves
wear gowns and stiletto heels
throw their want on their shoulder
and look at me puzzled
oiling their warped rifle
loaded long ago
and levelled, ironically, at their
own breast.
My withered loves
have been hanging around for years
now
and pass their life like an open
parenthesis.
Carré Fix
A birch tree is leaning northward
for years now dressed in black
her hair down to her waist
a girl withered in strange ideals
now pains memories
and sings men’s verses to herself:
our father who art in heaven hallowed
be thy name.
She smokes, not a filter tip, in
anticipation of the livings’ resurrection
and with her breath she censes the
earth’s bones
as in the past fate censed her.
Time is ground in her headaches
and flows from her eyes
like the spring Aphrodite washed her
body.
A birch tree stands in the north
her hair, yellowed foliage
offered without resistance
to the mortal tends of a so-called
autumn.
Accidental
Dust falls from on high
and here are we vexed about the
future.
How can the soul rejoice after so
much salt;
She drinks at night
and smokes sick verses at dawn
she sports gold-embroidered stoles
given by a slender hand
and lies to rest as the sun looks at
her
as the sun makes her hair blond
and devoutly scalds her blood.
Dust falls from on high
and here words refuse to meet.
Apology
Zincs are playing music
this rainy all-night do.
A bunch of keys is up to Salome’s
tricks
waiting for our head to lean on the
empty plate.
No, I mutter sotto voce
I’m not the one who beat the sun
hollow
or he who is beating the tambourine.
Sanctum
Take hold of this stone
open your hand and like a flash throw
it in this sanctum
named sea.
Afterwards with silence grazing the
lips
grab at the wave
and drag it out to drain
till you find the poems I used
to find you
to be able to look for you in this
very death.
Now
It took me years to realize
that the line was cut deep into the
rock
and what pours out and roars is
neither voice nor breath.
Years later did I realize
that glances tauten and spread day by
day
leaving bare-breasted in the wind
what hands build
and abandon like ships in full
sail
what the muses sung melodiously under
the willow tree.
Now as I watch you setting sail it
occurs to me
that the port sustains yet another
aspect
another look
which masses of azure seaweed cover
with their beauty.
Laconic
I got lost in corridors and passages
in the empty wakefulness of this
barren age
and for years I hear how spectres
weep
that we keep afloat in absent poems.
Memory’s earthenware jug
Hidden in memory’s jug
and soaked in blood and wine
I saw time’s unbroken stone
a hope’s last lamp
for struggles left incomplete
leaving behind an empty moon.
Loners multiplied in basements
for years angels hid the cause
they dug deep to raise the gallows
oldsters and babies turned to dust
trees renounced their fruit
and pains ceased without childbirth.
Fires were lit in all squares
all the dead were proclaimed saints
they rinsed sins with water
they wore tinplate panoplies
they put secret love affairs to the sword
threw irons and concrete in agonies.
Others petrified and didn’t
participate.
Can you shut sorrow in a drawer?
Paper and stone, poems apart
from the folly poets didn’t have
in songs another sort of famine
a part of our life they didn’t have.
Hidden in memory’s jug
I seek the water’s inebriety
time isn’t defined with grace.
Did the hands of Achilles or Paris
bury the dead sun-god
with the shield upright on the
grass?