I
 yet you bent like the secret about to be released
 and the command you chose to give us was beautiful
 and your smile was like a ready sword.
 The ascent of your cycle livened creation
 from your thorn emerged the way’s thought
 our impulse dawned naked to possess you
 the world was easy: a simple pulsation.
  II
 The secrets of the sea are forgotten on the shores
 the darkness of the depths is forgotten in the surf;
 the corals of memory suddenly shine purple. . .
 O do not stir. . . listen to hear its light
 motion. . . you touched the tree with the apples
 the hand reached out, the thread points the way and guides you. . .
 O dark shivering in the roots and the leaves
 if it were but you who would bring the forgotten dawn!
 May lilies blossom again on the meadow of separation
 may days open mature, the embrace of the heavens,
 may those eyes alone shine in the glare
 the pure soul be outlined like the song of a flute.
 Was it night that shut its eyes? Ashes remain,
 as from the string of a bow a choked hum remains,
 ash and dizziness on the black shore
 and dense fluttering imprisoned in surmise.
 Rose of the wind, you knew but took us unknowing
 at a time when thought was building bridges
 so that fingers would knit and two fates pass by
 and spill into the low and rested light.
  III
 O dark shivering in the roots and the leaves!
 Come forth sleepless form in the gathering silence
 raise your head from your cupped hands
 so that your will be done and you tell me again
 the words that touched and merged with the blood like an embrace;
 and let your desire, deep like the shade of a walnut tree, bend
 and flood us with your lavish hair
 from the down of the kiss to the leaves of the heart.
 You lowered your eyes and you had the smile
 that masters of another time humbly painted.
 Forgotten reading from an ancient gospel,
 your words breathed and your voice was gentle:
 ‘The passing of time is soft and unworldly
 and pain floats lightly in my soul
 dawn breaks in the heavens, the dream remains afloat
 and it’s as if scented shrubs were passing.
 ‘With my eyes’ startling, with my body’s blush
 a flock of doves awakens and descends
 their low, circling flight entangles me
 the stars are a human touch on my breast.
 ‘I hear, as in a sea shell, the distant
 adverse and confused lament of the world
 but these are moments only, they disappear,
 and the two-branched thought of my desire reigns alone.
 ‘It seemed I’d risen naked in a vanished recollection
 when you came, strange and familiar, my beloved
 to grant me, bending, the boundless deliverance
 I was seeking from the wind’s quick sistrum. . .’
 The broken sunset declined and was gone
 and it seemed a delusion to ask for the gifts of the sky.
 You lowered your eyes. The moon’s thorn blossomed
 and you became afraid of the mountain’s shadows.
 in the depths of time, how the heart contracts
 and vanishes in the rocking of a foreign embrace. . .
  IV
 Two serpents, beautiful, apart, tentacles of separation
 crawl and search, in the night of the trees,
 for a secret love in hidden bowers;
 sleepless they search, they neither drink nor eat.
 Circling, twisting, their insatiable intent
 spins, multiplies, turns, spreads rings on the body
 which the laws of the starry dome silently govern,
 stirring its hot, irrepressible frenzy.
 The forest stands as a shivering pillar for night
 and the silence is a silver cup where moments fall
 echoes distinct, whole, a careful chisel
 sustained by carved lines. . .
 The statue suddenly dawns. But the bodies have vanished
 So the beauties nature grants us are born
 but who knows if a soul hasn’t died in the world.
 The parted serpents must have circled in fantasy
 (the forest shimmers with birds, shoots, blossoms)
 their wavy searching still remains,
 like the turnings of the cycle that bring sorrow.
  V
 Where is the double-edged day that had changed everything?
 Won’t there be a navigable river for us?
 Won’t there be a sky to drop refreshing dew
 for the soul benumbed and nourished by the lotus?
 On the stone of patience we wait for the miracle
 that opens the heavens and makes all things possible
 we wait for the angel as in the age-old drama
 at the moment when the open roses of twilight
 disappear. . . red rose of the wind and of fate,
 you remained in memory only, a heavy rhythm
 rose of the night, you passed, undulating purple
 undulation of the sea. . . The world is simple.
 Athens, October ’29—December ’30





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