peterjamesmanos

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    A Monastery Christmas

     

    Brother Stavros had been stationed at the lower gate all that day          

    And worn a deep path in the snow with his pacing

    He was hungry and cold and he regarded the approaching darkness with relief

    For as soon as night fell he could go back inside the wall

    There in his room above the stables, he would eat some stale bread, cheese and olives

    Drink some freshly brewed tea to warm his frozen bones and go right to sleep

    What nonsense he muttered to himself waiting in this biting cold to greet some shabby peasants

    Coming to help the old abbot and his monks celebrate a holy January birth

    That had lost all significance… All reverence... All meaning...

     

    The wind heightened and he hugged his heavy shawl more closely about him

    And moved to the shelter of some trees by the side of the road –

    What was there to celebrate he asked himself... staring out from behind his hood

    As if trying to penetrate the white mists rising from the valleys below

    Down there men were slaughtering each other every day

    Animals in a jungle had more respect for one another

    Yes it was true what he heard down in the village the other day...

    The spirit of the Child has been trampled into the dusts of rolling tanks and marching feet

    The abbot and his gentle priests had no knowledge of these things...

    How could they when they were shut away up here on this remote mountain

    High above the sick world below secure behind their cloistered walls...

    But he had seen with his own eyes the devastation and the massacres

    The blood being spilled in the village streets and mountain passes...

    He watched as barefoot shepherds tried to stop the Panzer tanks

    With wine bottles filled with gasoline and were in turn cut down like so many hay-stalks

    Falling to the scythe by the enemy machine-gunners... Yes, he’d seen it with his own eyes

    Those two years leading his ragged partisans against that mechanized army of demons...

     

    He reached into his cassock and brought out a pack of German cigarettes

    The last pack from the last raid - twisting his lips into a mournful smile

    Even though they were betrayed they had done a thorough job on that supply convoy

    He counted the cigarettes... Just five... Only five of his seventy-odd fighters

    Survived the surprise German counter-attack… He put the cigarettes back into his pocket -

    He would smoke one tonight before he went to sleep...

     

    He heard the evening bell sound behind the wall... The monks were at their meal

    Suddenly he was very hungry and he wished he could go up and eat too

    Someday he’d find the courage to chuck his habit at the abbot’s feet and go down the mountain

    To the world of men once more - Even facing a firing squad did not bother him in moments like this

    But he should not be too hard on these priests

    They had taken him in without a word – when badly wounded he had climbed up here to hide

    After he tracked down and finished off that Judas of a peasant

    Yes, the monks had been kind... They healed his wounds and robed him in their habit

    He was taught to gather the wild berries on the lower slopes and press them into a potent brandy

    He learned to cultivate the green tea which grew wild on the steep mountain-sides

    And prune the olive trees in the fall and gather their fruit for light and food throughout the year...

     

    Because he was a man of exceptional strength the abbot gave him much of the heavy labor to do

    He performed the various tasks without a word and though he grumbled to himself in times like this

    Secretly he was content with this child’s-play-world where he had found sanctuary

    So he did nothing to harm his position or upset the abbot’s faith in him

    Even when the ancient priest would gently lecture him on the spiritual rewards he was missing

    By not joining the order – Brother Stavros managed with great skill and diplomacy

    To refuse without hurting the old man’s feelings...

     

     

    From time to time, he would descend to the world below wrapped in the anonymity of his habit

    He would wander the silent streets of villages he romped as a precocious child

    Recalling how these once-vibrant streets sang with the banter and laughter of a happy people

    Now only stares of distrust and suspicion were evident in their eyes

    He would sit alone in the “kafenia” in the market-places careful not to reveal too much

    Of his bearded face masked by his voluminous hood, and watch the Fascists strut

    Arm-in-arm with their traitorous strumpets, and he would sense his people’s terror and hatred

    As they scattered to let the enemy pass...

     

    And, as he slowly sipped his bitter chicory coffee laced with ouzo, there began in him

    A strange and disquieting awareness – For as he witnessed the misery about him, the poverty

    The starving sunken faces, the stooped and beaten forms hurrying along rubble-strewn streets

    He would sit and stare at them and was reminded of the frightened rabbits he kept penned as a child

    And the once-fierce love for these people ebbed with each descent from his mountain hiding-place

    Until all of them were reduced to nothing more than legions of shadows

    Strung across the familiar architectures of the villages of his youth...

     

    The compassion for his people, the anger toward the enemy, the loves and hatreds

    They were gone now – nothing was left except  for a curious and recurring emptiness in his heart...

     

    When he had seen enough, he would mount his elderly mule and climb into the safety of the hills

    Making his way slowly along obscure mountain trails back to the safe haven of the monastery

    Always after each of these journeys he would tell himself that it would be the last

    That he must not go again for it was far too dangerous – Yet when the mechanical routine of life

    Behind the walls became too much to bear, he would descend the mountain once more to watch

    And to reflect inwardly upon this strange dispassionate attitude which had come to possess him...

     

      

     

    Suddenly, he was shaken from his reverie as the tinkle of a donkey-bell

    Struck like a note from a heavenly harp in the crisp quiet of the mountain eve

    He peered into the darkness but could see nothing and began to think he imagined it

    But then he heard it again, this time much closer...

     

    “Who is it?” he bellowed into the night, his voice shattering the stillness...

     

    There was no answer but in the cut below, he made out the forms of the floundering burrow

    With a woman swaying on its back and as he hurried down to them he called out...

     

    “Are you alone?... Are the others not coming for the mass?... It is almost time to begin”

     

    He had reached them now and grasped the burrow’s rope and the exhausted animal nuzzled him

    Grateful for the chance to pause – He patted its head and looked up at the woman...

     

    She was very young and heavy with child – Her face was small and round – puffed and pained

    By the ordeal of the climb and her eyes watered as the wind bristling through the ravine

    Whipped through her inadequate clothing – Her breath, uneven, came quickly

    Labored vaporous puffs in misted whiteness round her face so that her features seemed to float

    In the thin diaphanous air as if woven of the subtle formlessness of dreams...

     

    He whipped the great shawl from his shoulders and reached up 

    And wrapped it round the trembling girl and lifting her gently from the animal’s back

    He shooed the burrow before him and carried her up through the drifts past the gate

    To his room above the stable and eased her onto his straw pallet and covered her with sheep-skins...

     

     

    Brother Stavros watched the tiny beads of sweat form on the girl’s face as she lay asleep

    In the warm comfort of the manger - He fed the large peat stove below with solid blocks

    And filled his large tea-kettle with melted snow till it overflowed

    Boiling now in preparation for the birth which he knew would be very soon

    He knelt anxiously beside her in the hay for she was in the final stage of her delivery

    She strained while still half-asleep to bring forth her child and as he watched her

    He marveled at this incredible thing that was birth – In pain he said to himself

    We are all conceived... In pain some of us live and die... Why should this be? – It was as if God

    Had conspired against the whole of the creatures that inhabit his earth - For here in this very manger

    Here was a child coming into a world filled with the sounds of gunfire in the valleys below

    And the bodies of dead hostages sprawled in the dusts of the compounds

    No doubt this child would die of hunger in infancy yet should it survive, it would pass its mortal days

    In anguish and uncertainty – Never to know a peaceful moment – Always struggling to maintain

    Even the smallest measure of dignity- a dignity that should be its birth-right from the start

    Ah, he whispered to the soon-to-be mother... what a price to pay for that first foolish breath of life...

     

    As he cooled the girl’s flushed face with snow-water, he recalled a night such as this years before

    He remembered the quiet woman he loved so dearly and that snow-filled night

    When he helped bring their child into the world – Yet a year later they were both taken as hostages

    To compel him to surrender himself and his ragged army of partisans

    And with this loss there had come to him a violent hatred for those who murdered his family

    He fought the enemy with a vengeance that made his name a rallying cry in the hills  

    And brought a price on his head – He led his “patriotes” in one successful raid after another

    Causing the enemy to side-track great numbers of men and machines in attempts to hunt them down

    In this backwash of the war - Until one terrible night when he led most of his men into imprisonment

    And death at the hands of an informer, once his childhood friend, barely escaping the trap himself

    And wounded he waited in the fields outside the German command post and jumped the traitor

    Strangling the life out of the man’s lungs...

     

    It was at that precise moment when he heard the sound of that last bit of breath                                 

    Escaping from the man he’d slain, that moment when the night wind absorbed that last hiss

    That it also carried with it the comfort and guidance and ability to pray to a God

    He no longer believed in... To serve nothing... To serve no one... To escape... To protect himself...

    This was all that mattered now..

     

     He was roused by the faint sound of the girl’s voice…

    “It is time” she whispered to him through her pain...

     

     

    Brother Stavros stood at the window and looked out

    It began to snow again and the spires of the monastery were lost beyond the swirling banks of flakes

    The wind drove the snow round the courtyard into dark corners

    Drifting soft graceful forms against stone walls

    Somewhere down the mountain, the muffled roar of an avalanche sifted back to him

    Signs of an early January thaw he thought

    He heard the animals below shift uneasily in their stalls

    He glanced over to where the exhausted girl slept peacefully on his pallet

    He had cleaned his gnarled hands with some brandy

    And washed the after-birth from the infant with warm water and cut and knotted the cord

    Then he wrapped the little boy as tightly as he could in one of his clean shirts and laid him next to her

    And her arm had encircled it, pressed to her side, her face close by its own

    He went down and milked one of the goats and carried the pan upstairs

    He took one of his unused applewood pipes and filled the bowl with the warm milk

    He carefully placed the stem in the baby’s mouth and was pleased when it sucked a bit of it down

    The girl watched him all the while and when he was finished she closed her eyes and slept...

     

    Suddenly he was very tired and he realized that he hadn’t eaten since morning

    But he could not bring himself to prepare a meal

    He closed the shutter and lay next to her on the hay-strewn floor

    The familiar odor of animals and hay combined to lull his senses and relax his aching body

    He turned on his side so that he could see her...

     

    She slept a soft rhythmical sleep, her whole body consumed

    By the rising and falling of her breathing

    In the soft glow of the oil lamp he had hung from a rafter

    Her face had lost some of its pallor and faint points of color had begun to tint her cheeks

    How delicate yet strong the hand that pressed her child to her...

     

    He wondered where she had come from and by what miracle had she found her way up the mountain

    When the trails had been drifted over by mid-winter snows?

    Where was her husband?... Perhaps a lover?... A German soldier?...

    No matter, it was her affair... He would not ask...

    He turned on his back to stare up at the great beams which supported the rough red-tiled roof

    Below, an animal snorted... Another moved stamping its hoofs against the base of its stall

    He closed his eyes...

     

    How small the child cupped in his hands... Its pinched red face... The smell of just-born

    The cord soft to his fingers as he cut and knotted it... How limp the girl’s body went

    As he placed the swathed infant by her side after he fed it... The infinite gratitude in her eyes...

     

    He placed a stalk of the dried grass between his teeth and sucked it... and the faint scent of fields

    Browned under late summer sun flitted back to him... He heard once more

    The fragmentary music of the lark above the pearl-mist of cloud-fills... He saw again the slanting flight

    Of blue deer just below the snowline...The cutting angled flight of crows above the brilliant fields...

    The mazarine sky... The aimlessness of their swinging darting flight... The solitary child

    Lying upon the solid earth under the twisted branches of the wild apple tree 

    Centered within the barren womb of this caravansary of mountains...

    Would it drink too the cool sweet water of the rock?... The warm milk of the goat?... Would it hear

    The passing-bell pealing in the village and wonder who had died?... Would it pray?...

    And when it is older, would it thrill to the crystalled laughter of a woman and know her love

    Deep in the silent passages of night?... Lose her and their child?...

    Within the million-colored tapestry of life, how deep would lie its disenchantment?...

     

    Where are the angels of his childhood?...

     

    How could he have forgotten the venerable prayers taught him by his mother... Prayers recited

    In the semi-darkness of their white-washed kitchen lighted only by the holy oil of the “kandili”

    Hung from the ceiling before the icons... He recalls the illumined faces of saints staring down on him

    From their shelf as his gentle mother whispered of passionate battles fought in the service of the Lord,

    The violence of their persecutions and the eternal rewards of their fruitful victories... And secretly

    He fights once more imaginary demons in the lush viridian fields above the village, lancing them

    With spears fashioned from the branches of the lemon tree... And as he grows old enough

    To spell his father in the wild pasturelands high in the hills, he sits again among the grazing sheep

    And prays silently for hours to the invisible hosts beyond the drifting clouds...

     

    Life is warm and full and he wishes all this beauty would return... He wishes with such passion

    That tears come to his eyes... The vivaciousness of his mother... The quiet strength of his father

    The warm haven of that shining white house perched on the hillside above the village of his youth...

    The wash and counter-wash of dreams... The brilliance of memories...

     

      

     

    Just before he fell asleep, Brother Stavros heard the child sneeze and then his mother’s tender kiss...

    Outside, as suddenly as it began, the snow had stopped and high on the hill

    The monks led by the old abbot filed slowly out of the chapel, each carrying a lighted candle...

    They chanted softly, the Gregorian “Genesis Sou Christe” and the delicate music soaring

    Into the infinite majesty of night, lost itself to the acute loneliness of far immutable stars...

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    The Quarry Ghosts

     

     

    It's difficult to trace out where the blockhouse stood

    Although if you look carefully and slice the brush

    The granite base cleared now of strangled berry-wood

    Is visible beyond the wash

     

    Once long ago - this place resounded with delighted cries

    Of children scampering across the quay

    As steamer-cranes lifted huge cuts beyond the rise

    Onto the barkantines that lay at lee

     

    Among weed-woven tangles of this ditch

    You find old lamps and pots and Leslie Magazines

    A shredded doll - A tallow cup stuffed in a niche

    A book of verse marked Josephine's

     

    The names and dates are also chiseled there to read

    The Abels Joshuas Mollys and the rest

    These drillers cutters blasters and their brood

    Whisper across the hundred summers that have passed

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Note:

    The granite used to build Grant's Tomb in Riverside Park

    in New York City came from the quarry on Friendship Long

    Island in Muscongus Bay, Maine... When the workers asked

    for a five-cent hourly raise, the owners in Boston refused

    and abandoned it...The workers decided to operate it

    themselves and hired a young blaster who promptly blew

    a hole out to the sea... The pumps could not keep up

    and it was abandoned again...

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

       

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    A Natural Worship 

     

    They are simply there to be revered

    Creatures of air of water and of earth

    Osprey seal racoon - Each is affirmed

    As surrogates for personal rebirth

     

    He was a paradise child - Astonished wonder once

    Bargained down through generations of neglect

    To a not-too-much-time-left ambivalence

    A ravaged heritage now left unchecked

     

    An innocence defeated by intolerant rush

    To ruinous subjective senseless gain

    As manifested by a plastic beach and other trash

    Scattered by wind and tide on miniature plain

     

    Pure glaciers once crept from sunless north

    Marbling ledges to childrens' "Golden Stairs"

    Now orange mud spills onto granite lith

    To mark the end of ancient march from arctic spheres

     

    With each inevitable rounding of earth's star

    An ephemeron of poisoned dust obscures its light

    To slowly stain once-lustrous air

    Into a gangrenous and suffocating blight

     

    And yet despite slow desolation of their ken

    The natural children sing a measured truth

    Sleek seal - swift osprey - bright clever coon

    Unhurried melodies that sound a steadfast faith

     

     

     

     

     

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    When Winter Comes

     

    When winter comes - It comes too soon

    To consumate the garden's pride

    Now - Few feet markings of shore birds on snow

    In randomed cross-hatch show at all

    And wash out with each tide

     

    Indigo clouds have massed beyond the reach

    Prophetic vision of the violence to come

    As lichen cease their crawl across feldspathic rock

    And icy lacings weave around the glacial stones

    All living slows - Some life succumbs

     

    The summer's innocence has fled in sorrow

    In full retreat before Alberta's blows

    As old exhausted spruce in wind-swept coves

    Collapse with heaviness of years

    Felled by fierce winds and waves and weighted snows

     

    The weariness of years now settles in

    The tragic mountain of desire is stilled

    The dreams decay - The needs are nil

    When winter comes - It comes too soon

    To resurrect the unfulfilled

     

     

     

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    Anemone

     

    Rock-pool of the flame

    Water-fired by the dawning sun

    Burning black granite like a napalm shot

    Against black gravel silt

    It flames the mazarine of sea which

    Glistens

    Through the hazes of the dawn

    Like bloodied silk black rock explodes

    Scarlet

    Beneath screeching cries of hungering

    Birds of morning

    Blaze-blinded are the gannets

    And the black-back

    The great blue and the shag

    Breakfasting on herring run

    Above the fire-flowers

    Of the wind

     

     

     

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    M

     

    M is the island

    The island becomes M*

    It becomes the aloneness which is M

    M whose depth is the depth of deep rock

    And its myriads of strata

    Where vision becomes void

    And yet makes sea-sounds

     

    Sea-birds 

    Stain his rock with their leavings

    The acids of their fish-food

    Stain the rock which is M

    Stain it

    The bright alizarin of blistered sky

     

    M is the island where he walks

    Among grey-green fields he walks

    Fields of rotting weeds and crawling moss

    Of gutted trees and orange grass

    And his dark wet earth-blood

    Is smothered by the sheddings of trees

    As his step is smothered by their softness

     

    M is mist

    Mist which hugs

    Velvet in its softness

    Muffles

    Quiets

    Soothes and caresses

    Dulls him

    And his world of

    M

     

     

    *M is for Monhegan – M is for Me (Maine) and Me too!

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    The Model

      

    This evening together on the waterbed it wasn't anything

    Like he imagined - This coarseness, this unexpected vulgarity

    A clockworks complication

    Yet prelude to the sensual vineyard he'd hoped it would be

     

    Dressed in flowers screened on cambric she herself had spun

    She preened before the fly-blown glass

    Then settled on the redolent slosh beside him

    And shed the brilliant shift

     

    She wasn't pretty - This solid scandinavian

    Her skin a mottled marble - She was layered and full-buttocked

    God how he wished her long-legged

    With gentle spaces between ribs he could stroke with his nose

     

    Yet here she was smiling in the half-light

    All lumps and inelegant hillocks

    She seemed to him crass fatuous inane

    A slightly screwy curl of lip an invitation for him to begin

     

    All summer he told himself he really sort of wanted her

    She had such beautiful eyes and long bright hair

    The palest natural blond polished still brighter by the island sun

    It really became her

     

    He watched for weeks as she worked at the fragile wheel

    Flacid fingers feeding flax - remarkable in their dexterity

    The straw-colored floss matched her lovely braids

    It had set him off and he loved her for it

     

    Spinning though just passed the time - She was there to pose

    Draped across a chaise - The flowing folds of fat gave us fits to draw

    Unlike her friend whose angry angularity was slashed out quickly

    Almost without looking - She rippled as she undulated to the bell

     

    All summer he sort of wanted her but she was taken

    Now her friend - That dark acrimonious broad was gone - All ribs. Long legs

    All bones and sharp corners - She left this morning with the others

    And so tonight summer would be over for them both

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

      

     

     

     

     

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    Let Them Eat Tar

     

    The time of our collective innocence has almost expired

    Along with the promises of those who have always lied to us

    Those cunning pols and their supporters

    The moneycrats nefarious in their deviousness

    Who trampled our dreams and flung them

    Into a common ash-heap - a dry dead dust

    Darkened and opaque - a deceitful greed

    Now congealed and blackened by false promises

    Life’s savings held for ripened after-years

    Pauperized

     

    Now old age

    Has become an unwanted pitiful welfarism

    Our dreams unfulfilled – Our lives unraveled 

    Duped dismantled destroyed

     

    Similar sinful liars back then too –

    Just as today - Killing people is good economics they preached

    Almost 70 years since those sly bottom-feeders shipped us out

    To save the republic they said - theirs first then ours

    Wars are very profitable and create lots of jobs they said

    With Rosie turning out tanks and planes instead of cars

    But near-children were thrown willy-nilly into an unimaginable maelstrom

    Kids barely outgrown their tar-chewing days

    Tar stripped and gouged from between granite cobbles

    Of neighborhood streets

     

    And they're still doing it to us

     

    Once... he swears he heard one of those plundering plutocrats proclaim

    “Hey… To hell with them... That's capitalism... If they don’t like it…

    “Let them eat tar!”

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    Leaving

     

    (On leaving our island home after 35 years)

     

    It’s passed - This fragile shard of time

    Reality has shattered art and suddenly it seems to crop the scented softness

    Of the southwest breeze and turns it to a norther's bitter cut

     

    Why must they leave? - Why must they give up on this place?

    Must they forego the distant speck of soaring hawk?

    Forego the bob of sail behind a neaped-out ledge?

    Forego a darkened sunset sea bejewelled by a thousand buoys

    Flashing their multicolored fishing strings all set to guide the next day's haul?

     

    Must they deny delight in the wilding caps of waves

    Laced out beyond the middle distance of the sea

    Frothed by igneous remains of ancient glacial folly

    Stretched on a vaporous horizon? 

    Must they not sense once more amorphous whisperings of fog

    That ends their melancholy world beyond the closest ledge and yet resounds

    With soft thallasic sounds - A halcyon melody of sea?

     

    It will go on of course but not for them

    Their string's run out

    Their once-bright colors turned to wash adrift among the lowering clouds

    The shape of ledges rocks and trees have all but

    Disappeared

    The tide pools all dried up

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    New

     

    Here then in this transient garden it is met

    This end of soul-sight once distant in conception

    Is effected with ease

    The end of the sentimental - The end of the obvious

    And with as much ease a serenity commences

    As leaves are torn from momentary branches

    And ground to immaterial dust

     

    So bent upon the soul

    Pierced forgotten

    This intagible is drawn from within

    Given reason - Given purpose

    And whatever it becomes - It will be absolute

    Desiring only with dreams as build-blocks

    To discern the intagible without

     

    Pitiful mouse in this mouldering maze

    Why do you screech for exit?

    Is it not left for you  - The New

    To smash the broken conceptions

    And give meaning to movement?

     

    Can it be these corrupted masses

    Like dead grasses shall rekindle their seed?

    Will you feel their vigor? - Spaceless unknown?

    Will you be tempted by their enfeebled attempts

    Those whimpers of stalwart articulates

    Those shouts of the weak the meek?

     

    Yes you - The New

    Together with a very Few

    Will you be flung upon the withered concept

    To destroy it with your wounds as weapons?

     

    An inward wind has begun to sweep the silenced masses

    As dead grasses - Suddenly alert

     

    It rolls over the hopelessness

    Thundering messages

    Flee!

    Desert it all!

     

    It will change

    It will come when the blinded claw the walls to dust

    When all will change

     

    Rush back to the savage lash

    To the natural cradle where it was conceived