Greece Yesterday and Today Modern Greek Literature Nick Kontaridis


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Greece Yesterday and Today Modern Greek Literature

  • Nick Kontaridis


Modern Greek Literature – Review

  • Prose

    • The Short Story
    • Novelette
    • Novel
  • Poetry

    • Epic Poem
    • Lyric Poetry
    • The Sonette
    • The Elegy
  • The Language Question

    • The demotic
    • The Katharevousa


Poets Rhigas Pherraios

  • The War Hymn

  • “How long, my heroes, shall we live in bondage,

  • alone like lions on ridges, on peaks?

  • Living in caves, seeing our children

  • Turned from the world to bitter enslavement?

  • Losing our land, brothers, and parents

  • Our friends, our children and all our relations?

  • Better an hour of life that is free

  • Than forty years of slavery!”



Poets Dionysios Solomos

  • Hymn to Liberty

  • “I can see thee by the lightning

  • of the sword-blade flashing high;

  • I can see thee by the brightening

  • Of the swiftly glancing eye.

  •  

  • From the hallowed bones arising

  • Of Hellenic heroes free,

  • Now as ever valor prizing,

  • Hail, all hail sweet liberty!

  •  



Poets Dionysios Solomos

  • Epigram to Psara

  • On Psara’s blackened, charred stone

  • Glory silently walks all alone

  • mediating her sons’ noble deeds,

  • and wears a wreath on her hair

  • made of such few scattered weeds

  • on the desolate earth left to spare.



Poets Dionysios Solomos

  • The Little Blonde Girl (Xanthoula)

  • At eventide I saw her,

  • The little girl golden-tressed,

  • When she took a boat

  • To go far to the West.

  • Its snow-white sail,

  • Swollen by the winds,

  • Was like a dove frail

  • With outspread wings.

  • The friends were standing by,

  • In joy, or in grief,

  • And she waved good-bye

  • With her white kerchief.

  • I stopped to see her greeting,

  • Her warm farewell,

  • Till in the distance fleeting

  • She was hidden by the swell.



Poets Dionysios Solomos

  • To Mr. George De Rossi

  • When you come back to your father’s,

  • You’ll see only his tombstone,

  • Before which I write you, alone,

  • On this first day of May.

  • Our May flowers we will scatter

  • On his kind, innocent breast,

  • For tonight he went to rest

  • In Christ’s warm embrace.

  • He was clam, still, and quiet

  • Till the last hour, and peaceful,

  • Just as now he looks gleeful,

  • His soul having flown from him.

  • Yet, a moment before flying

  • Toward heaven’s realms up high,

  • He waved gently with a sigh

  • As if for a final blessing.



Poets Dionysios Solomos

  • The Dream

  • My soul, goddess of beauty,

  • Listen to what I’ve dreamed:

  • With you I was one night,

  • All to me so slendid seemed.

  • We two walked together

  • In a garden of small size,

  • All the stars shone brightly

  • And on them you kept your eyes.

  • I was asking them, “Stars say

  • If there among you lies

  • One that shines from above

  • Like my lovely lady’s eyes?

  • Say whether you ever saw

  • On others such pretty hair?

  • Such an arm, such a limb,

  • An angelic vision fair?



Poets Dionysios Solomos

  • The Dream (con.)

  • Then a truly angelic smile

  • Shone on your fair face,

  • That methought I espied

  • The sky open in embrace.

  • And then I took you aside

  • By a rosebush in bloom,

  • Slowly I let my head hide

  • Into your snow-white arms.

  • Every kiss you gave me,

  • Dear soul, with sweetness,

  • Made a new rose appear

  • On the bush, with swiftness.

  • They were aborning all night,

  • Till the early light of dawn

  • Which found us looking pale



Poets Kostis Palamas

  • Athens

  • Here the sky is everywhere, on all sides shines the sun, and something like the

  • honey of Hymettus is all around; out of the marble grow lilies unwithering;

  • divine Mount Pentelicon flashes, begetter of an Olympus.

  • The digging axe stumbles on beauty; in her boson Clybele holds gods, not

  • mortals; when the shafts of twilight strike her, Athens gushes violet blood.

  • Here are the temples and the groves of the sacred olive, and in the slowly

  • shifting crowd, like a caterpillar on a white flower,

  • a host of deathless relics live and reign with myriad souls; the spirit flashes

  • even in the earth; I feel it wrestling with the darkness in me.



Poets Kostis Palamas

  • The Grave

  • On the grave on which the Black Horseman takes you, be careful not to accept anything from his hand; And, if you feel thirsty, do not drink the water of oblivion in the world below, my poor plucked spearmint! Do not drink, lest you forgot us fully, forever; leave marks so as not to lose the way, And being light and small like a swallow, with no warrior’s weapons clashing round your waist, See how you can trick the Sultan of the Night; slip away gently, secretly, and fly to us up to here; Come back to this empty house, O our precious boy; turn into a breath of wind, and give us a sweet kiss.



Poets Kostis Palamas

  • Olympic Hymn

  • Ancient immortal spirit, pure father of beauty, of greatness and

  • of truth, descend, be revealed as lightning here within the glory

  • of your own earth and sky at running and wrestling and at

  • throwing illuminate in the noble Agons' momentum and crown

  • with the unfading branch and make the body worthy and ironlike.

  • Planes, sees and mountains shine with you like a white-and-purple

  • great temple, and hurries at the temple here, your pilgrim every nation,

  • o ancient, immortal Spirit.



Poets Myrtiotissa (1883-1967)

  • I love you. I can say nothing deeper, more simple or greater.

  • Here, before your feet, I scatter, full of longing, the rich-petalled

  • blossom of my life.

  • O, my swarm of bees! Suck from it sweet, the pure perfume of my hart!

  • See, I offer you my two hands, clasped for you to lean your head softly upon.

  • And my hart is dancing, is all envy, and begs to be, like them, a pillow for your head.

  • And for a bed, my love, take the whole of me, extinguish upon me the flame of your fire.

  • While I, close to you, hear life flowing away to the beat of your heart …

  • I love you. What more, my precious love, can I tell you that is deeper, more simple, or greater?



Poets Melissanthi (1910-          )

  • Melissanthi, pseudonym of Hebe Skandhalakis, was born in in 1910. She received her diplomas from various institutes in Athens for the study of English, French, and German, and has since translated much from these languages, in particular from Robert Frost and Emily Dickinson. Author of nine books of poetry and a play for children, she received the award of the Athens Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1936 for Return to the Prodigal, and the Palamas Award in 1946 for Lyrical Confession. An essentially lyrical poet, she suffered a religious crisis and turned to an expression of metaphysical agony which nonetheless emphasizes her belief in man and his ability to realize his basic goodness and love.



Poets Melissanthi (1910-          )

  • Atonement

  • Every time I sinned a door half opened, and the angels

  • who in my virtue had never found me beautiful,

  • tipped over the full amphora of their flower souls;

  • every time I sinned, it was as though a door had opened,

  • and tears of sweet compassion dripped among the grasses.

  • But if the sword of my remorse chased me from heaven,

  • every time I sinned a door half opened, and though men

  • thought me most ugly, the angels thought me beautiful.



Poets Melissanthi (1910-          ) Ancient Shipwrecked Cities

  • Ancient shipwrecked cities tell us of the omnipotence of Silence, of her sudden overwhelming floods within their walls; the snows of time are heaped on her breast; in a slow movement voyaging, the icebergs of millenniums proceed… All set out from the primordial space of Silence and return to her once more;



Poets-Zoe Kareli

  • Zoe Kareli the sister of Nikos Pendzikis, was born on July 22 (August 4), 1901 in

  • Thessaloniki, and received the education of a girl of good family according to her class

  • and period by being tutored in English, German, French and Italian, in singing and

  • drawing. Widiwed in 1953, she spent a year and a half with one of her two sons in

  • Australia. She has translated Eliot’s Familly Reunion and The Coctail Party, and has

  • herself written poetic drama.

  • She shared the Second State Prize in Poetry in 1955, was awarded the Palmes

  • Academique by france’s Ministry of Education in 1959, won the First State Prize in

  • Poetry in 1978. Karelli has been remarkably consistent in her existentialist attitude.

  • Whatever she has written has been a quest for a way out of man’s modern impasse, for

  • redemption from the feeling that the soul has been ravaged and devastated, that a

  • promise for justice has been broken. The fate of modern man, she believes, is to live in

  • a constant but creative doubt-not a passive and enervating doubt, but one that, by

  • indicating the duality of man’s struggle, takes on existentialist value. Her themes

  • become concernedwith the split personality of the person of sensibility tormented to

  • filnd his integrity and to create centers of continuity. The tone of her poetry, in

  • consequence, has neither the resilience of feminity nor the inflexibility of masculinity

  • but conbines the passionate turmoil of feminine sensilbility with the tough abstraction

  • of masculine thought.



Poets Zoe Kareli

  • From Diary

  • To begin life anew?

  •  

  • It isn’t a matter of most beauteous

  • And ecstatic youth, not even one

  • Of man’s significant wisdom.

  • ……………………..

  •  

  • Spitit and essense, the complete presence,

  • Reality and fantasy side by side.



Poets-Zoe Kareli Worker in the Workshops of Time

  • As we brought the shape, a worker, a blower of glass, felt his love profoundly for the material into which he blew his breath.

  • At times crystal or like pearl, mother-of-pearl, precious ivory or opal with misty colors drifting toward azure. All these were materials that become shapes, erotic shapes of whatever exists within time.



Poets-Joanna Tsatsos



Poets Angelos Sikelianos(1880-1951)

  • Angelos Sikelianos was born in 1880 in Lefkas, one of the Ionian islands, and died in Athens in 1951. For many years he roamed throughout the length and breadth of Greece, confirming his knowledge andmastery of Greek tradition and the demotic tongue. The central action of his life was the formation of the Delphic Festivals in 1927 and 1930. Ath Delphi, where the Amphictyonic Council (the first League of Nations) used to meet, Sikelianos hoped to found a cosmic center where, through a dedication to a religious view of life without dogms, the nations of the world might meet to insure peace and justice. Aeschylus’ Prometheus Bound and Suppliantswere lavisly mounted, Olympic contests were held on the heights of Mt. Parnassos, Byzantine music was played, Greek demotic songs were delivered and danced, and an international university was planned. The author of nine books of poetry and of seven poetic dramas, Sikelianos was a poet in the grand tradition, a Years-like figure, a prophet and seer, a man of high vision and noble actions, one who had assimilated the cultural traditions of his own nationand those of the modern world, a revolutionary democrat and mystic who acted beyond the particular political creeds and religious faiths of the world. His vision was pantheistic and panhellenic, and his poetry, with its wide rhetorical sweep and unequaled command of language, encompassed both the lyric (of which he was a modern master), the philosophic poem, and in his later years, the poetic drama.



Poets Angelos Sikelianos(1880-1951)

  • Thalero

  • Blazing, laughing, warm, the moon watched over the

  • vineyards, and the sun was still parching the bushes,

  • as it set in the dead calmness. The angry grass was

  • heavily sweating milk in the warm stillness; and you

  • could hear the grape-pickers whistle among the

  • young vines that climbed up the many wide steps of

  • the hillside; the robins were shaking their wings on

  • the river’s banks; the heat-haze spread over the

  • moon a spider-web kerchief.



Poets Angelos Sikelianos



Poets Angelos Sikelianos



Poets Constantine Kavafis (1863-1933)

  • Constantine Kavafis was born in Constantinopole in 1963 and died in Alexandria in 1933. Except for three years in England, two years in Constantinopole, a few months each in Paris and Athens, he spent his entire life in the Alexandria he loved, employed for twenty years as a common clerk in the Department of Irrigation. He wrote only three or four poems a year, published some of them in broadsheets for private use, and not until he was forty-one d he bring out his first book, a slim volume of only fourteen poems not for sale, reissued five years later with the addition of only seven poems. His main work, collected after his death, totals some forty-six erotic, some forty-one contemplative, and some sixty-seven historical poems. Written on a demotic base, but with a mixture strangely his own from Ancient, Byzantine, and Medieval Greek, his poems (often with Hellenistic setting) are brief, neither emotional nor lyrical, but dramatic, narrative, objective, realistic, a recounting of facts and episodes in a tone of voice which is dry, precise, deliberately prosaic and, above all, ironic-the undisputed founder and master of modern Greek poetry, and one of the first poets of the modern world .



Poets Constantine Kavafis (1863-1933)

  • Ithaca

  • When you set out on the voyage to Ithaca,

  • pray that your journey may be long,

  • full of adventure, full of knowledge.

  • Of the Laestrygones and the Cyclopes

  • and of furious Poseidon, do not be afraid,

  • for such on your journey you shall never meet

  • if your thought remain lofty, if a select

  • emotion imbue your spirit and your body.

  • The Laestrygones and the Cyclopes

  • and furious Poseidon you will never meet

  • unless you drag them with you in your soul,

  • unless your soul raises them up before you.

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Poets Constantine Kavafis (1863-1933)

  • But you must always keep Ithaca in mind.

  • The arrival there is your predestination.

  • Yet do not by any means hasten your voyage.

  • Let it best endure for many years,

  • until grown old at length you anchor at your island

  • rich with all you have acquired on the way,

  • having never expected Ithaca would give you riches.

  • Ithaca has given you the lovely voyage.

  • Without her you would not have ventured on the way.

  • She has nothing more to give to you now.

  •  

  • Poor though you may find her, Ithaca has not deceived you.

  • Now that you have become so wise, so full of experience,

  • you will have understood the meaning of an Ithaca.



Poets Constantine Kavafis (1863-1933)

  • The City

  • You said, “I will go to another land, I will go to another sea.

  • Another city shall be found better than this.

  • Each one of my endeavors is condemned by fate;

  • my heart lies buried like a corpse.

  • How long now in this is withering shall my mind remain.

  • Wherever I turn my eyes, wherever I gaze,

  • I see here only the black ruins of my life

  • where I have spent so many years, worn thin and fallen to ruins.”

  •  



Poets Constantine Kavafis (1863-1933)

  • As Much As You Can

  • And if you cannot make your life as you want it,

  • as least try this

  • as much as you can: do not disgrace it

  • in the crowding contact with the world,

  • in the many movements and all the talk.

  • Do not disgrace it by taking it,

  • dragging it around often and exposing it

  • to the daily folly

  • of relationships and associations,

  • till it becomes like an alien burdensome life.



Poets Constantine Kavafis (1863-1933)

  • An old Man

  • At the back of the noisy café

  • bent over a table sits an old man;

  • a newspaper in front of him, without company.

  • And in the scorn of his miserable old age

  • he ponders how little he enjoyed the years

  • when he had strength, and the power of the word, and good looks.

  • He knows he has aged much; he feels it, he sees it.

  • And yet the time he was young seems

  • like yesterday. How short a time, how short a time.



Poets Constantine Kavafis (1863-1933)

  • The First Step

  • The young poet Evmenes complained one day to Theocritus:

  • "I've been writing for two years now and I've composed only one idyll.

  • It's my single completed work. I see, sadly, that the ladder of Poetry is tall,

  • extremely tall; and from this first step I'm standing on now I'll never climb

  • any higher." Theocritus retorted: "Words like that are improper, blasphemous.

  • Just to be on the first step should make you happy and proud. To have reached this

  • point is no small achievement: what you've done already is a wonderful thing.

  • Even this first step is a long way above the ordinary world. To stand on this step

  • you must be in your own right a member of the city of ideas. And it's a hard, unusual

  • thing to be enrolled as a citizen of that city. Its councils are full of Legislators no

  • charlatan can fool. To have reached this point is no small achievement:

  • what you've done already is a wonderful thing."



Poets Nikos Kazantzakis(1883-1957)

  • Nikos Kazantzakis was born in Heracleion, Crete, in 1883, and died in

  • Feiburg, Germany, in 1957. He studied law at the University of Athens,

  • philosophy under Henri Bergson at the College de France, and literature

  • and art in Germany and Italy.In 1919 he served briefly in the Ministry of

  • Public Welfare, and in 1947 he was appointed Director of Translations

  • from the Classics for UNESCO. The greatest man of letters of modern

  • Greece, Kazantzakis wrote some nine novels (of which Zorba the Greek,

  • The Greek Passion, /freedom or Death, The Last Temptation of Christ, St.

  • Francis, and The Rock Garden are available in English), five books of

  • travel, sixteen poetic dramas, three philosophical treatises (including The

  • Saviors of God: Spiritual Excersises, availlable in English translation by

  • Kimon Friar), and his great epical poem of 33,333 lines, The Odyssey: A

  • Modern Sequel, hailed unanimously as a world masterpiece immediately

  • on its American publication in a translation by Kimon friar. In addition, he

  • was thranslated into modern Greek Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, Dante’s

  • Divine Comedy, Goethe’s Faust, Darwin’s Origin of Species, and

  • innumerable other books.



Poets Nikos Kazantzakis(1883-1957)

  • O Sun

  • O Sun, my quick coquetting eye, my red-haired hound,

  • sniff out all quarries that I love, give them swift chase,

  • tell me all that you've seen on earth, all that you've heard,

  • and I shall pass them through my entrails' secret forge

  • till slowly, with profound caresses, play and laughter,

  • stones, water, fire, and earth shall be transformed to spirit

  • and the mud-winged and heavy soul, freed of its flesh,

  • shall like a flame serene ascend and fade in sun.



Poets Nikos Kazantzakis(1883-1957)

  • From Odysseus, A Drama

  • And you abandon your fortune to the suitors

  • and do not dare utter a word in protest!

  • They’re after your mother like a dogs in heat,

  • and you stare at the sea, and expect the

  • hands of an old man to come and save you!

  • Do you want to be like him? Then buckle

  • his sword and go to the palace to kill!

  • Ah, if he were to put his foot here again

  • your island would shake with terror,

  • and the suitors would keep quiet like deer

  • that have scented a lion’s breath;

  • and they would pay with black blood

  • For their ignoble and most indecent feasts!

  • ……………



Poets George Seferis (1900-1971)

  • George Seferis, pseudonym of George Seferiadhis, was born in Smyrna in 1900

  • and in 1926 entered the Ministry of Foregn Affairs. He was formerly the Royal

  • Greek Embassador to England. In 1961 he was awarded the William Foule

  • Poetry Prize in England, and in 1963 the Nobel Prize in Literature. The author of

  • eight books of poetry and two of critical essays, he is a poet of evocative

  • symbols and metaphysical distinctions who has superbly translated Eliot’s The

  • Waste Land and other poems. All of his mature poetry is written in a free verse

  • of great sinuousness, rhythmical yet modulated, which never rises in tone or

  • diction beyond the “conversation between intellectual men”, as Ezra Pound has

  • it. His is a poetry of understandmentand hesitation, dealing with recurring themes

  • of expatriation and the disintegration of the modern world. His poetry is

  • brooming and contemplative, precise yet subtle in thought ang image. He has

  • often attempted to define what Greece is as a “state of being”. Yet in the center

  • of each poem is the poet himself, looking back into the mythological past of his

  • country and her symbols, retracting her history, and telling a story which has the

  • independent validity of imaginative finction.



Poets George Seferis (1900-1971) The House Near the Sea

  • The houses that I had they took from me. The times happened to be unpropitious: war, destruction, exile; sometimes the hunter hits the migratory birds, sometimes he doesn’t hit them. Hunting was good in my time, many felt the pellet; the rest circle aimlessly or go mad in the shelters.

  •  



Poets - George Seferis Summer Solstice

  • The greatest sun on one side and the new moon on the other distant in memory like those breasts. Between them the chasm of the starry night deluge of life.

  • The horses on the threshing-floors gallop and sweat upon scattered bodies. All are going there and that woman whom you saw beautiful, in a moment is bending, can endure no longer, has knelt. The millstones are grinding them all and all become stars.

  • Eve of the longest day.



Poets Odysseus Elytis (1912- )

  • Odysseus Elytis, pseudonym for Odysseus Alepoudhelis, was born in Hracleion, Crete in 1912, of a well-known industrial family, and studied law and political science at the University of Athens. In the period between 1940 and 1941 he served as a second lieutenant on the Albanian front in the Greek- Italian war. In 1938 he represented Greece at the eleventh International Congress of Writers at Geneva, and in 1950 at the first International Congress of Art Critics in Paris. He has spent many years in France and several months touring the United States in 1961 under the auspices of the State Department. The author of five books of poetry, his work marks the joyous return to nature, to summer and the sea, to the blaze of the noonday sun over the aegean, to the praise of adolexcence and its sentiments. His second book was entitled Sun the First, as one might refer to the emperor. Though his poetry is rhythmical in effect, he is more interested in the plastic use of language and imagery, both of which still reflect his earlier preoccupation with surrealism. His experience on the Albanian front during the war brought greater depth and sobriety to his poetry and resulted in one of the best elegies written about the war. He was awarded the State Award in Poetry in 1960 for Worthy It Is.

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  •  



Poets Odysseus Elytis (1912- ) Aegean

  • Love The network os islands and the prow of its foam and the gulls of its dreams on its highest mast a sailor whistles a song.

  • Love Its song and the horizons of its voyage and the sound of its longing on its wettest rock the bride waits for a ship.



Poets Odysseus Elytis (1912- ) Aegean

  • And the pigeons in the caves rustle their wings blue awakening in the source of a day sun--

  • The northwest wind bestows the sail to the sea the hair’s caress in the insouciance of its dream dew-cool—



Poets Yiannis Ritsos (1909- )

  • Yiannis Ritsos, was borne in Monemvasia, a town of Peloponnesos, in 1909, fell ill at the age of eighteen months of tuberculosis and spent many years in various sanatoriums. His heritage is a tragic one, for both his mother and elder brother died of tuberculosis and his father and sister died insane. Because of his left-wing activities, he spent the years 1948-52 in various detention camps in Greece. The author of twenty-three books of poetry, three volumes of Collected Poems (1961-64), of two plays and a poem for dance, he won the State Award in Poetry for 1956 for Moonlight sonata.



Poets Yiannis Ritsos

  • Moonlight Sonata

  • Let me come with you. What a moon there is tonight!

  • The moon is kind – it won’t show that my hair turned white.

  • The moon will turn my hair to gold again. You wouldn’t understand.

  • Let me come with you.

  • When there’s a moon the shadows in the house grow larger,

  • invisible hands draw the curtains, a ghostly finger writes forgotten words in the

  • dust on the piano – I don’t want to hear them. Hush.

  • Let me come with you a little farther down, as far as the brickyard wall,

  • to the point where the road turns and the city appears concrete and airy,

  • whitewashed with moonlight, so indifferent and insubstantial so positive, like

  • metaphysics, that finally you can believe you exist and do not exist,

  • that you never existed, that time with its destruction never existed.

  • Let me come with you.



Poets - Yiannis Ritsos

  • From Romiosini

  • These trees cannot adjust to lesser sky, these stones cannot adjust beneath the tread of strangers, these faces cannot adjust unless they feel the sun, these hearts cannot adjust unless they live in justice.

  • This landscape is as harsh as silence, it hugs to its breast the scorching stones, clasps in its light the orphaned olive trees and vineyards, clenches its teeth. There is no water. Light only. Roads vanish in light and the shadow of the sheepfold is made or iron.

  • Trees, rivers, and voices have turned to stone in the sun’s quicklime. Roots trip on marble. Dust-covered lentisk shrubs. Mules and rocks. All panting. There is no water. All are parched. For years now. All chew a morsel of sky to choke down their bitterness.



Poets Nikos Gatsos (1915- )

  • Nikos Gatsos was born in a small village in Arcadia and took his degree from the School of Letters at the University of Athens. From early childhood he grew up in the heroic traditions of his countryside, made vivid for him by the ballads and folksongs of the region. He is the author of only one longish poem, Amorgos, but it has had a disproportionate influence among the writers of his generation. In Amorgos, the practice of surrealism, the rhythms of the Bible, and the traditions of Greek folk ballads were combined for the first time in a strange, arresting, and elegiac manner. Profoundly influenced by the Ionian philosopher Heracleitos, Gatsos believes that the essence of life and art is to be found in nothing static, but in an eternal flux. In the brooding long lines of his Iamentations, however, there is always to be found the sprig of basil or rosemary, symbols of hope and resurrection, joyful melancholy.



Poets Nikos Gatsos (1915- )

  • Amorgos

  • With their country tied to their sails and their oars hung on the wind

  • The shipwrecked slept tamely like dead beasts on a bedding of sponges

  • But the eyes of seaweed are turned toward the sea

  • Hoping the South Wind will bring them back with their lateen sails newly painted

  • For one lost elephant is always worth much more than two quivering breasts of a girl

  • Only if the roofs of deserted chapels should light up with the caprice of the Evening star

  • Only if birds should ripple amid the masts of the lemon trees

  • With the firm white flurry of lively footsteps

  • Will the winds come, the bodies of swans that remained immaculate, unmoving and tender

  • Amid the streamrollers of shops and the cyclones of vegetable gardens

  • When the eyes of women turned to coal and the hearts of the chestnut hawkers were broken

  • When the harvest was done and the hopes of crickets began

  • And indeed this is why, my brave young men, with kisses, wine, and leaves on your mouths

  • I would want you to stride naked along the riversides



Poets -Nikos Gatsos



Poets Nikiphoros Vrettakos (1911- )

  • Nikiphoros Vrettakos, born in Sparta in 1911, worked as a common laborer in Athens until he was given a post in the Ministry of Labor. The author of twenty-one books of poetry, he is a pure singing voice, writing spontaneously without much attention to form, impelled by an almost naïve religious devotion and a deep sentiment for the ills of down trodden humanity. His hatred of injustice and his desire to better the world often leads him to moralize in the midst of song. Christian and democratic in his views, he believes and asserts in his poetry that art must be expression of love and goodness, that these form the beauty of civilization as a higher ordering of human relations, a kind of divine law, a “deathlessness of art”. He has twice won the State Award for Poetry: in 1940 for the Grimaces of Man, and in 1956 for poems, 1929-1951.

  •  



Poets Nikiphoros Vrettakos (1911- )

  • An Almond Tree

  • An almond tree with you beside it. But when did you two blossom? Standing by the window I look at you and weep.

  • My eyes can’t bear such mirth. God, give me all the cisterns of heaven and I’ll fill them for you.

  • Peace

  • Love is in my heart like an almond tree branch in a glass of water. The sun caresses it and is filled with birds. The best nightingale utters your name.



Poets Nikiphoros Vrettakos (1911- )

  • There is no Solitude

  • There is no solitude where a man is digging or whistling or washing his hands. There is no solitude where a tree stirs its leaves. Where an anonymous insect finds a flower and sits, where a brook is reflecting a star, where holding his mother’s breast with his blissful little lips open an infant sleeps, there is no solitude



Poets Nikiphoros Vrettakos (1911- )

  • from Murky Rivers

  • Love is the mountain and the night with its stars. Love is the sea and the day with its sun. And the little sparks that fly from the chimney of the house and the eyes of the little bird even those are love.



Poems from Greek Cyprian Poets

  • Kypros Chrysanthis Lefkosia

  • For miracles and a flood is the time, of commemorative lamps the rosy flames; and, Lefkosia, the twilight frames your sky like a fate sublime.

  • Your castles were filled by an ancient tale, much as for flowers the bees of spring blessings and perfumes bring such as the prayers of a maiden unveil.

  • Come, empty the jug, stranger-friend, filled with the rosy-grape wish. Cyprus’ pride is the stead.

  • As if for a beautiful archaic head, o friend, the hymn for our isle finish, that’s blooming, no longer wilted by conquerors’ tread.



Poems from Greek Cyprian Poets Yiannis K. Papadopoulos

  • Let’s say

  • Let’s say that now we are first facing the light of the world, that our ships never set sail for troy and the Mycenean kings didn’t go hunting lions, for the artisans to engrave their golden memories on the metal immortality. Let’s say that the Persians haven’t yet come to ask for our land and the buzzards at marathon haven’t counted their bodies and the shells in the sea of Salamis haven’t clung to the sunken triremes;

  • That Pheidias’ hands are the tiny hands of this newborn baby awaited by the unwrought marbles of our country.



Poets Nikolaos Kontaridis

  • Do not Wonder, Passerby

  • Do not wonder, passerby in the meaningless pathways of life. Only lead the footsteps there, where the night pours the holy light and the stars never cease to shine.

  • Have the thread of truth as your trustful guide, quickly feel what the world is, what purpose you have in life.

  • Destroy images of ruined gods, raise the big idea, become its standard-bearer and go to open that unravels itself to you.

  • Do not wonder, passerby, in the meaningless pathways of life. Only lead your footsteps there where a man becomes a man.



Poets Nikolaos Kontaridis

  • It Is Not Easy

  • It is not easy

  • To take a paintbrush

  • And draw a man.

  • With words

  • To illustrate

  • The deepness of his soul.

  • With colour

  • To add passion

  • To his life.

  • With persistence, gather

  • The ruins

  • Of his dreams.

  • Yellow rose petals of a stripped blossom

  • That lose themselves and disappear

  • In the abyss of time.



Poets Nikolaos Kontaridis

  • We

  • We, who were once children

  • And created imaginary words

  • Erecting

  • Palaces and towers in dreams

  • We, who partook the experience

  • Of our ancestors

  • And courageously we sought

  • Everything worthy and great

  • We, who wore the lion’s skin

  • Who made our heart of steel

  • Who filled our existence with anxieties

  • Who took long journeys



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