The Marble Woman Above Athens
The figures in ether
Never fade,
Or ever slowly decline.
Instead, they hover,
Calm and quiet;
A pose in marble, an indelible shine.
Sculpted woman, cool and gray.
Through time you’ve stood
As you do today.
Each careful gesture formed and grooved.
Warm yet grand,
Poised and smooth.
Your vestigial faces
Are reminders of healing vigils
And cleansing rituals.
In your image
Are precious, lost, but present spirits.
Come down, through the ages.
A splendour of beauty, noble in stone
Over Athens she stands
Gracefully gazing upon her home.
To Greece we return
To Greece we return, through the forest we
roam.
Across the Aegean we rode, upon the
foam,
to where we are welcome, there awaits our
home.
There, the native Gods number many
and trade their gifts freely.
Thus, Apollo with the basket of sagging
vine
and Dionysus with the crisp, painted line.
They, together, manifested in minds
while masked phantoms of Greek actors
began their haunted music
and sang in chanting rhymes.
Telling of how the tears of Oedipus,
though he tries,
cannot escape
his regretful eyes.
To his fate Oedipus resigned,
and so a king grows passive.
How could mere chance align
so many interwoven collapses?
Was the cause of his fate some force,
divine?
Or some urge within him, grown malign?
A procession of invasive images,
fear and pity strike hearts in the
theater.
The chorus cries out
an uproar of lamentation:
“Where will you go?” calls the retinue,
after their fallen king.
“Who do we turn to now?” cries one.
“When love is forlorn?” cries another.
“When the gods cast a pall?” groans one
more.
“Will new heroes let us down?” they wonder
aloud.
The more keenly the king suffered
the more closely the audience gazed,
on his eyes, sealed shut- now
a two-way mirror of suffering memory.
“These evil pregnant spiders: fate and
society!
they trapped us in their web, woven to
catch those now to guilt,
like an honest woman caught in a rare lie-
but why blame her, when the web has us
all?
Curse these lamentations; away with
these images.
They must end if we are ever
to see clear to our true desires.
Seeing desire.
Find the splendorous blushing thing
in the reveries and rituals of spring.”
Like swallowed gold, ecstatic clarity
is the prize taken by a startled few.
Yet each seat faces the sea,
and every seat sees the stage.
Keenly he suffers, closely we gaze,
until the procession leaves the stage.
Some others, called good citizens,
hasten on with their days.
Yet, our grateful relief,
in huddled whispers we pronounce-
while the others,
with fond reverence for nothing, slouch.
To Athens we’ll travel,
no more will we roam.
For where we are welcome-
there awaits our home.
In the Roman wilderness
The people looked back in mourning,
as upon a vision they had lost;
an image of their fulfilment
in giving honour to their gods.
Do you see the sepulchred columns
gently laid at rest,
by the hand of a forgotten deity,
in the Roman wilderness?
Gone are the days
of self-effacing ennoblement
on the hills of that island
across the Aegean.
The halcyon hills rang out in Spring
in an echoing chorus
from festivals that marked the season
with new wine, cries of grief, and
shrieking joy.
On stage an actor holds up a groaning mask
a symbol of shock that brings the people in
thrall.
The stage on these haunted evenings
was a radiant mural painted with restless
night.
At the theatre they had gathered for the
long-awaited performance
and were left astounded;
filled with fear and pity, yet
with the calm and purified minds
of those who found favour
with both Apollo and Dionysus.
They sat in sublime gratitude,
for the priceless reward of catharsis.
At home, votive candles are slowly burning
their ancient warming glow,
to illuminate the alters, smooth with
ashes,
as families smile at banished woes.
At the alter smooth with ashes,
where the treasured past is never robbed,
they marked the memory of their parents,
and the blessings of their gods.
Oedipus Can Not Cry
His sewn
together, squinting eyes
preserve
the look of cursed surprise.
Before
we count the reasons
that
this man was so unblessed,
let us
stand among the chorus
or
join and witness in the audience.
A problem arose: The man felt alone,
except for ghosts of deeds yet unatoned.
Whether in castle or hovel,
he enjoyed no true home.
With friends, with lovers or family,
he found a moment’s glee,
at which he’d suddenly turn,
and shudder to dimly see
that all his riches, all his reason,
all his orderly schemes
of life and of seasons,
and of valorous dreams,
gave way to a growing
and comfortless silence.
Among those seated in theatre rows,
looking up to Oedipus, from seats just
below-
They wonder what spirit rules his fate.
What was the source of his seminal hate?
Is there any worthy cause for such
withering pain?
Will he bear yet more? How would we bear
the same?
They imagined themselves,
while seated in rows,
joining in with the chorus
to sing loudly of woe:
“Grieve for your youth, for your mother,
your father, your soul!
You have made your decisions.
You must watch them unfold.
You have done the forbidden:
Laid down with your own.”
Up looks the audience
as choral figures pass by;
what a morbid sight, this fallen king,
even to calloused eyes.
“Look back with regret
on the fruits of your anger!
Seen through your veil
over bitterly born tears!”
Tears that cannot drip
from those hardening scars.
“Why did you, oh King,
take Jocasta’s pin to your eyes?
It was not lack of sight
that made you blind,
nor will piercing your eyes
let you unsee.
You needed your vision,
for you’ve fallen from grace.
Now you’ll be banished to a faraway region
not knowing whether they’ll welcome your
face.
You trouble your daughters
with self-pitying prayers that you say.”
The haunted, upright and fugitive figure
stirring
up dust, to his fate, walks away.
With
soft, featureless eyes,
sightless, he faces dry alluvial plains.
Sightless,
itching patches of scabs,
are
all that remains.
All
that remains is all that he’s seen,
and
a warm, endless, aching sensation
of
a blind yet reflexive and beckoning gleam
cast
from us, as we gaze on his creation.
Rupert Brooke and I Confront the Sphinx, A Play in Two Parts
Part I
With Rupert Brooke I wander
Among the gleaming ancient dead
Whose warm hearts shine more brightly
Than the faces of the living, seething red.
Brooke and I first met as planned
-on a windy road- resurgent.
Sun and wind inviting life,
On a morning in the Spring.
We set out to the Sphinx
To challenge what she will say.
She sharply words this riddle,
As her claws grip life in sway:
“I am in plain sight, I cannot be seen.
I am what you’ve never done, I am your
constant dream.
I cannot be hidden, yet I lurk behind a
screen.”
Rupert and I trade puzzled glances.
Yet, with jewels of memory intact,
We recall how Oedipus solved her riddles.
And boldly take heart in that.
Sensing this, she lashes out,
“You mortals have no solace, faith, or
creed!
No refuge you can turn to
In your time of need.”
“Do you wish that we did?” I ask,
Feigning calm. “Would you trouble
Us this way, if we had some haven
From this heartless world?”
“Yes,” she smiled, shrewd in her vigil,
honed over the years,
She pompously claims,
“I’d keep spreading fears,
And I’ll make nightmares,”
she says, in a lurid boast,
“Long after you two
Are nothing but ghosts;
Your havens to me
are ash in a vase, dust on a shelf.
In torment you’re raised,
Each a curse to yourself.
When you are lost to a cause,
or dead on a field,
I’ll laugh last at time’s pitiless yield
And the heaping spoils of your paltry
ideals.”
To this Rupert and I replied,
“Why this zeal of pageantry? Why these
schemes?
Why place your poison
into our dreams?
Toil in pain? We surely must.
Toll the bell? You one day will.
Yet you’ll never tear asunder
The temple of Athena upon the hill.”
Coldly, she snaps, “Your precious Greeks
are no more, their temples lay in ruins,
Spectral joys are the best you’ll find
And you’ll lose them, like olden tunes.
Your fleeting joys are shards
Mere fragments you exhume
That fade like unshared memories
Of a soldier’s quiet tomb.”
Our blood stirred at this,
“We honour our dead, we cherish their names,
We never forget, even
Blood shed in vain.
You’ll never end our reveries
Or rob our secret pride,
While spirits of Dionysus and Apollo
Stand together at our side.
You may shriek
and time may moan
And gnaw our faces
And grind our bones.”
Lacking a peroration,
We stood proudly in the sun.
“Yes, we know we’re not immortal,
Yet our creation is never done.”
In a pose of defiance, we face her.
The Sphinx reclines, amused.
The chorus makes its entrance, marching
As the rhythmic music cues.
John Bennett - is a graduate student studying psychology. His literary and philosophical interests are in Greek tragedy, Rimbaud, Nietzsche, CĂ©line, Malraux, and the Beats. John is a combat veteran, having served five deployments. His poetry has appeared in Zenith literary magazine, Issue 3. On Twitter @JohnBen46646181
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