It’s All

GREEK

TO ME

 

 

(ruin image)

 

©2000

  1. Neil Meili

 

 

(photo of you at Taverna Socrates)

 

 

 

 

Dedicated to Dorsey

 

With Gratitude

 

 

There are many hills

 

that I would not have climbed

 

without you


CONTENTS

 

 

The tourist

 

Cabbies of Athens

 

Below the Acropolis

 

Aphrodite Hotel

 

Greece 2000 A.D.

 

In Greece

 

Independence Day 2000

 

Olympics

 

Olive oil

 

Karolina

 

Momma in Mykonos

 

Widows

 

The sea

 

Mosaic

 

Owls to Athens


THE TOURIST

 

 

In Greece

 

I walk through ruins and museums

 

with a camera around my neck

 

 

The shutter inside me

 

clicking


CABBIES OF ATHENS

 

 

Chaos pounds over dead civilizations

 

horns blare battle cries, fists shake the air

 

 

Taxi driver warriors slash and stab

 

and play pirate with the meter

 

 

And woe befall the coward fare

 

who doubts their courage and their skill

 

by any attempt to buckle up that belt


BELOW THE ACROPOLIS - MARCH 2000

 

 

In the Agora

 

bright red flowers

 

from seeds older than Socrates or wisdom

 

 

Converse among the grasses

 

and look up

 

at the temple covered hill


APHRODITE HOTEL

 

 

At the Aphrodite Hotel

 

 

Moon and Acropolis

 

full in our window

 

 

Greece is so lubricating


GREECE 2000 A.D.

 

 

Standing in front of the statues of the wise

 

noting how very wise they were

 

To be born at a ripe old age

 

and grow younger every year

 

 

Socrates for instance

 

(469-399)

 

certainly get it right

 

being born at seventy

 

and working backwards

 

to that point

 

of light


IN GREECE

 

 

In Greece

 

I remember and meet

 

myself everywhere

 

I am Socrates questioning

 

I am the athlete striving

 

the architect planning

 

the builder building, the potter shaping

 

the sculptor seeking, the warrior dying

 

and the poet pointing

 

 

In Greece

 

I am all men and all gods as well

 

and I remember

 

How many times in this life alone

 

I have pushed the rock endlessly uphill

 

Carried the world on my shoulders


Had my liver eaten by the savage bird

 

How many times

 

I have fallen in love with my own

 

reflection

 

Reached out for the sweet grapes and

 

sweet water

 

to find them moving always beyond my

 

grasp

 

Been forced to echo only what others

 

have said

 

Tied myself to the mast to resist the

 

sirens call

 

Fought in a thousand wars

 

full out on the open field or sea

 

or hidden in the belly of a wooden horse


GREECE – INDEPENDENCE DAY 2000

 

We stand in the sunlight of Athens

birthplace of democracy, philosophy

theater and reason

 

Here man first learned true freedom

 

Created gods

in the image of his vices and his virtues

and learned to embrace and best them all

 

 

Stores in Athens close for the parade

people gather from miles around

 

For hours past the viewing stand

soldiers and sailors march in step

 

Overhead the jets and choppers

roar by in strict formation

 

Thirty deep and more

people push and flow and smile on cue

 

I search the marchers and the crowd

 

Looking for that one toga, one book

 

One independent mind

 

One ancient Greek


OLYMPIC GAMES

 

 

In ancient Greece

 

the athlete was admired

 

statues raised in his honor

 

 

Olympic games every four years

 

the basis for the whole Greek calendar

 

 

Modern Olympics forget the Greek Ideal

 

of sound mind in sound body

 

 

Forget the many statues of the wise

 

Forget that Olympic games contained

 

display and competition

 

in poetry, in music, and in drama

 

 

In the modern Olympics every four years

 

a new sport is voted in

 

I vote to add the balance back


OLIVE OIL

 

 

In Greece last week

 

I bought a bottle of extra virgin olive oil

 

 

Which is a bit more expensive than the

 

regular virgin kind

 

 

I expect that it is due to the labor involved

 

tying all the branches apart

 

 

So that they don’t even touch themselves


KAROLINA

 

 

Artist Laureate of Mykanos

 

her adopted town floats above the canvas

 

 

Windmills dance on the hills

church domes and white houses

rebound light across the narrow lanes

 

 

Ships bob on the bluest water

watched by pink pelican and faithful dog

 

 

In her pictures, handsome Greek men

work the boats and bars

 

 

Forty years from Boston town

she knows too much of these men

but the island nights get cold

 

 

Her art raised their two children

 

It cost a lot

 

But to marry one of these

patriarchetypal sons of pirates

would have cost more soul

than this artist or her art would pay


MOMMA IN MYKONOS

 

 

Marolina says, enjoy the room

 

my eighty to year old mother

 

lives on the first floor under your stairs

 

call on her if you need anything

 

 

Momma doesn’t understand our English

 

but most important that we understand

 

she could understand, but chooses not to

 

 

She also knows that her daughter

 

must rents the rooms above her head

 

but she will not look up


WIDOWS

 

 

Greece is a land of widows

 

black dresses with brooms on empty stairs

 

 

This comes from ten thousand years of wars

 

 

Greece is a land of proud and arrogant men

 

This comes from lives of great danger

 

 

And the supply and demands of

 

ten thousand years of widows


THE SEA

 

 

In two days

 

three hours on the friendly sea

 

 

Back and forth from Mykonos to Delos

 

past rocks with good seats for sirens

 

rocking in a cradle still rocking

 

since the gods were young

 

 

Feeling the wake of the Island

 

where she floated invisible in the mists

 

before agreeing to dig in her feet

 

and challenge the jealous Hera

 

providing Leto a birthplace for the

 

ever grateful Apollo and Artemis

 

 

Feeling their blessings


MOSAICS

 

 

On Delos a floor caught my eye

 

with an Escher like mosaic pattern

 

 

Optical illusions of rectangles in rows

 

still bright after thirty centuries

 

 

Next day in a New York airport

 

we take our seats in the lounge

 

fabric covering the chairs

 

in exact same pattern


OWLS TO ATHENS

 

 

One does not take coals to Newcastle

 

or owls to Athens

 

 

But it is good to go

 

with an appreciation of coal and owls

 

 

It is also permitted to leave Newcastle

 

with a bit of coal in one’s pocket

 

 

Or Athens with a small bronze of an owl

 

 

And memories of a questioning call

 

floating across the Agora

 

to the small cliff restaurant

 

 

Where we rest on the long climb down

 

from all the heights of the Acropolis

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

back quote

 

Now the dream in the blood throbs more swiftly

The truest moment of the world rings out”

 

ODYSSEUS ELYTIS