I am delighted to be able to share these two poems with you

I am delighted to be able to share these two poems with you which hold a special place in my small anthology. To begin with they are associated with two very dear friends who have revealed both in their actions and charity that they have come to a deeper understanding of what it means to be a poet. That is to ‘make’, or to ‘create’ [Gk. poiein]. And so it gave me much joy to have these two symbolic poems of mine received by beloved friends, Les Murray[1] and David Brooks.[2] And Australia, I have to say, has been blessed with a good number of such enlightened poetic souls. Both poems were published in Southerly. The first, Piata Romana, Bucharest, is significant to me for it was written in Bucharest, Romania, in 2011 mid-August around the time of my 50th birthday.[3] The second, From Paphos on a Showery Morning,  is also important to me for two reasons.[4] First, it was written in Paphos, Cyprus, the birthplace of my father; and it was in all likelihood the final poem that Les would request for Quadrant before his passing away.[5] I am grateful indeed to Murray and Brooks, beautiful presences not only in the context of my own life, but internationally as witnesses to the possibilities of great literature.


[1] https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/les-murray

[2] https://davidbrooks.net.au/

[3] Southerly, Volume 74/2 in Australian Dreams 1, (2014), 229.

[4] Southerly, Volume 77/3 in Mixed Messages, (2017), 171.

[5] Les made this request in private correspondence only a few months before he passed April 29th 2019. No doubt he would have had a great chuckle at the juxtaposition of Murray and Astaire! The poem was not republished as that was the last time I would hear from my beloved friend of close to twenty years.

From a letter to a clergyman friend

From a letter to a clergyman friend [edited]:

Sent August 11th, 2022

  

“I have called upon You, for You will hear me, O God; Incline Your ear to me, and hear my speech.” (Ps. 17:6)

 “There is always something left to love.” (One Hundred Years of Solitude, Gabriel García Márquez)

 

I have been preaching to the rocks and to the beach pebbles for a long time now… some of these I hold tight to bring back home to continue where I might have left off… and also to the Pacific Ocean I will call out with its evensong in the background; and in more recent times to our beautiful dog, Mishka, I preach from the Book of Jonah, on our long walks beneath Illawarra’s (“pleasant place”) moon. A good word is never lost. There is more than one way to plant a seed. Like the designations of compassion. These days I am too old to despair, as I once did at the things taken away from me, to find myself teetering on the edge of the unthinkable. And I am also way too informed to hold out any hope for the “sublime porte”. Despite my professed brokenness, I try my best in the knowledge that I will at least leave something useful behind. Even if only for a small group of dear, dear friends and for my beloved students who have so affectionately embraced me. 

On the Trials and Redemption of Monk Sebastian K.

I am now closer to completing my little book. A ‘long letter’ from a dying monk who is asked by a spiritual child to write a reflection on his understanding of God. Our old monk who in his younger days was a painter, also quotes from his many notebooks for he has also been a passionate reader. He is a composite of a number of monastics and other people in the world from different walks of life, which I have been blessed to encounter during my own travels [and, of course, for it cannot be otherwise, there are some pieces of myself in there as well]. I can now share with you the first few pages of this [psychotherapeutic] exercise. Many thanks to those friends who have already read sections of this work and have been so very encouraging in their responses. We, the old monk and I, thank you from the depths of our heart. (MGM)

On the Trials and Redemption of Monk Sebastian K.

By M. G. Michael

I

Especially for those who set themselves as obstacles before me, for it is through you that I have learnt of the incomparable beauty and power of compassion and forgiveness. The truth is, I have numbered you from the beginning, amongst my dearest of friends. A sweet balm to the soul even in the autumn of her crossing over.  

II

Source: https://artbythebay.com.au/products/white-angel-wings-canvas-print

Everywhere I look there are feathers. Their function is clearly marked. For example, flight feathers and down feathers. Most of the time I find them on the grass in parks; other times near the traffic lights at busy intersections; on the platforms of train stations; near hospitals and fire stations. And as Wim Wenders similarly discovered, very often you will find feathers at the front entrances to libraries. There is more to these integumentary appendages than meets the eye. They are of every size and colour. Feathers as beautiful as the flying flatweaves of Xinjiang, and Ningxia, and Kashgar. If you have time to examine these closely, you can sometimes make out the insignia and decorations.

Inside humble exteriors of churches in the little village of Arbanassi in north central Bulgaria, and others in the northern reaches of the Troodos Mountains in Cyprus, are to be found breathtaking murals and frescoes which have been compared to the magnificence of the Sistine Chapel. The “uninitiated” tourist will regularly walk or hike past these treasures not interested and let down by the first impressions. This scenario is repeated countless of times and in many other places everyday across the world. It is worse still, when we choose to ignore our neighbour because he or she might be of a comely appearance, not realizing that within him or her there is to be found an even greater splendour. “You yourself are indeed another small world,” says Origen, “with the sun, moon and stars within you.”

III

“And fate? No one alive has ever escaped it, neither brave man nor coward, I tell you— it’s born with us the day that we are born.” (The Iliad, Homer)

“When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I put the ways of childhood behind me. For now we see only a reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known.

And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.” (1 Cor. 13:11-13)

“Someday, somewhere - anywhere, unfailingly, you'll find yourself, and that, and only that, can be the happiest or bitterest hour of your life.”(Memoirs, Pablo Neruda)

“The day when God is absent, when he is silent – that is the beginning of prayer.” (Beginning to Pray, Metropolitan Anthony Bloom)

“In every life there is a mystery that can never wholly be divulged.  We all take secrets with us to the grave and the most profound of those secrets is who we really are.” (Dark Night: Walking with McCahon, Martin Edmond)

“It was the last that remained of a past whose annihilation had not taken place because it was still in a process of annihilation, consuming itself from within, ending at every moment but never ending its ending.” (One Hundred Years of Solitude, Gabriel García Márquez)  

IV

The Monk’s Two Recurring Dreams

I am walking along a narrow, winding path, when I suddenly come across a great mountain. At the foot of the mountain stand seven old men, they are dressed in humble attire and hold on to a shepherd’s staff. They look almost identical and could quite easily be mistaken for the same man. Yet, I am drawn to one in particular, and I ask him to guide me up the mountain. I follow him up what at first looks to be very difficult and impassable terrain. As we progress up the mountain I notice a series of green pools of water with beautiful fish. The terrain becomes less challenging until we reach the summit. Then I am alone. I find myself immersed in a golden-blue light.

I am holding hard onto the neck of a great eagle, there is some snow on us. I can see a blazing gold horizon in the distance. It could be a fire, but I feel no heat and I am not frightened. I am terrified only that I will lose my grip and drop into the dark vacuum below, or that this marvellous creature will decide to shake me off. It is oddly quiet, except for a familiar choral sound which is emanating from afar, music which I have heard before in another dream.

[1] And now as I prepare for my death

I was a painter in my life compelled by the alchemy of colour and by Isaac Newton’s glass prism of light. Then a soldier of fortune when my art would evolve into a hideous representation of my soul. I drank to my fill and experienced all manner of carnal pleasure. I wandered the earth until my eyes were at last opened by the grace of God. And now as I prepare for my death, a monk for the greater part of my life, I give an account of my days, in the hope of coming closer to my ultimate truth. That I might find forgiveness and be spared from future judgement. Whatever little might prove to be of any good or profitable use to you, from what will follow, this you can take away. As for the rest, consign it at once to the dirt.

“The Spirit of God has made me, and the breath of the Almighty gives me life.” (Job 33:34)

“I paint because the spirits whisper madly inside my head.” (El Greco)

 [2] The first drawing I ever made was of a flower

Myths and metaphors are not to be too easily discarded. They can help make sense of how the mind interacts with reality. My mother would tell me the first drawing I ever made was of a flower. It was she said, “a purple Hyacinth”. The god Apollo created the flower from the blood of the slain youth Hyacinth. On its waxy florets he had inscribed something analogous to the word “despair”. She remembers the impression it had made on her for I had quite inexplicably drawn the flower with all of its intricate detail on the inside of my forearm, right down through to my fingers. I don’t recollect too much of this, except for a commotion made around me. The bulbs of this plant are poisonous. They contain oxalic acid. Maybe I had made myself sick.

“Mythology is not a lie, mythology is poetry, it is metaphorical. It has been well said that mythology is the penultimate truth--penultimate because the ultimate cannot be put into words. It is beyond words. Beyond images, beyond that bounding rim of the Buddhist Wheel of Becoming. Mythology pitches the mind beyond that rim, to what can be known but not told.” (Joseph Campbell)

“The metaphor is perhaps one of man’s most fruitful potentialities. Its efficacy verges on magic, and it seems a tool for creation which God forgot inside one of His creatures when He made him.” (José Ortega y Gasset)

[3] Annotations on the intoxicating fragrances

I would draw flowers whenever a new shape, an urceolate or a stellate, a campanulate or a cruciform, for example, would catch my attention. I discovered that colour would determine the meaning of a flower. I filled notebooks, one after the other with sketches; annotations on the intoxicating fragrances; and directions reminding me where I had made my precious finds. I was delighted, as well, to realise through my own childhood investigations, that most flowers showed a bilateral symmetry. If you cut them in half in any place, those halves would prove identical. Then some time later, I began to paint rivers and seas. I used watercolours, or aquarelle, as Father would correct me, whose business affairs would often take him to the great capitals of Europe. He had made it clear to me, above all given as I was of a robust constitution, that he would have preferred I wasn’t too much interested in flowers.

“There are always flowers for those who want to see them.” (Henri Matisse)

“You could wonder for hours what flowers mean, but for me, they’re life itself, in all its happy brilliance. We couldn’t do without flowers. Flowers help you forget life’s tragedies.” (Marc Chagall)

[4] I drew and painted very nearly without cease

I would practise my brushstrokes endlessly and passionately, just as Martha, my eldest sister, rehearsed her beloved, yet ultimately tragic, Chopin. In the movements of my hand and wrist I tried to mimic the wings of a bird, even of a butterfly in flight. I stayed with watercolours, which were good for my temperament. Oils would take far too long to dry. I drew and painted very nearly without cease, as if I was a possessed man, fighting against some unseen demon. And this demon, barely noticeable at first like the onset of a poisonous infection, would grow threatening to completely consume me. Years later, this obdurate dedication to my art would help me to understand the rudiments of prayer. Like the use of watercolours, prayer, too, was filled with never-ending possibilities. “Nothing is insignificant,” the Old Man would later tell me, “all acts touch upon the eternal.”

“He who wishes to become a master of colour must see, feel, and experience each individual colour in its endless combinations with all other colours.” (Johannes Itten)

“Every canvas is a journey all its own.” (Helen Frankenthaler)

[5] An accumulation without the sorting

Next to painting I enjoyed literature. There were books everywhere in our home. So many they were at one time stored one atop the other in old valises beneath the staircase. Most of our books were, of course, in our native tongue, Greek, including a large number of translations from the western classics. I remember the collected works of Shakespeare above all. The Othello volume with its terrifying Moor of Venice on the cover was, in hindsight, a meticulous representation of confused dread. Later, when I was better equipped, there would be time enough for the concentrated reading of these writers and the others which I would uncover from the Orient. There were a number of books in English and French. My English was acceptable but I gave up on the language of Victor Hugo long before my three sisters, much smarter and more diligent than me. For now the emphasis was more in the doing than in the being; an accumulation without the sorting.

“Thus says the Lord, the God of Israel, ‘Write all the words which I have spoken to you in a book.’” (Jer. 30:2)

“When you come, bring the cloak that I left with Carpus at Troas, and my scrolls, especially the parchments.” (2 Tim. 4:13)

“Whenever you read a good book, somewhere in the world a door opens to allow in more light.”  (Vera Nazarian)

“I kept always two books in my pocket, one to read, one to write in.” (Robert Louis Stevenson)

I began to love going to my new job at Flemington Markets (1994)

“Nothing is so painful to the human mind as a great and sudden change.” (Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Frankenstein)

“Be on the watch. The gods will offer you chances. Know them. Take them.” (Charles Bukowski, The Laughing Heart)

 

https://www.weekendnotes.com/free-parking-paddys-market-sydney/

It took some weeks getting used to replacing my freshly pressed black cassocks for the loose-fitting cleaning overalls, but I began to love going to my new job at Flemington Markets, popularly known as Paddy’s Markets.[1] It was a season of peace compared to the rancorous world I had recently removed myself from, and at the same time it was a new type of learning. Raymond Carver says it well in Cathedral, his astounding short story on ‘inner vision’: “I’m always learning something. Learning never ends.”[2] I was hired as a cleaner: toilets, floors, potato conveyers, fruit crates, large vats, giant coleslaw mixers, windows, walls, and more. My balletic moves around [and on] the vegetable sorting machines had to be seen! I was also proud of my new ‘vestments’: a pair of weatherproof boots, gloves, the teal overalls, and a yellow raincoat with a hood. The hours as well, they suited a night owl like me. Work started eleven at night and I would clock off the following morning around seven, it was not full-time so I had rest days in between. There were many things I enjoyed during those months that I was able to stay at Paddy’s before I left to focus on the first of my dissertations on the Apocalypse of John, the one dealing with the infamous “number of the beast” (666).[3] Each night I looked forward to greeting my new ‘con-celebrants’: the Asians who would cut and prepare the salads; the sunburnt farmers; the animated stall owners; the testy truck drivers; and the pest-control fellow with the silver earrings, who would also moonlight as a Reiki Master.

 The coffee-breaks were history classes in themselves, ‘evidenced-based’ as I would later call them. I heard many stories of divers kind in that smoke-filled kitchenette from these well-weathered men who had seen much. Some would show genuine interest in the books I would bring along with me. Tough but honest folk, with a beamish quality about them. They reminded me of the abattoir workers I used to help load the meat trucks in the early hours of the morning, to add to my allowance when I was a theology student in Thessaloniki. These burly fellows who would drink cold ouzo throughout their shift from their secreted hip flasks to then hurl verbal [but ‘friendly’] abuse at each other, were also not lacking in the stories department. I felt troubled some days, perhaps even guilty, for I would think there was more real understanding of the mystery of God in the lives and in the raw dignity of these men and women, than I had discovered among members of the clergy. Of course, I knew then as I do now, there are priests who move about us marked by the grace of Pentecost. I would read whenever I could steal a few minutes during the morning breaks or in between my scheduled jobs. The Philokalia[4] and the Art of Prayer,[5] were invariably within my reach. Yet again, I would be taught that wonderful and encouraging lesson often heard on Mount Athos: “It is not the place, but the Way.” For are not the rainbow and the moonbow both dependent on the reflection and refraction of light? I might have been without a pulpit, but still I would soliloquize on these and other things.

Other times it might be as simple as the positive energy good spirits release into the air. The felicity between humans who appreciate the history which the ‘other’ brings into the room. Is it something similar to ‘sonder’? Given my earlier life growing up at our café, and the years I spent as a little boy living and breathing in the atmosphere of this great old ‘ark’ of the human condition, this was not unexplored territory. Later I would largely draw from all of these experiences when I first began to experiment with the micro-story format. I look back over more than twenty-five years[6] later when I first put on the cassock and I realize it is with these ‘straight-talking’ people, at places like Paddy’s markets and King Street, Newtown, where I am most happy and comfortable. I would have stayed at Flemington for much longer if not for my pride: “this perpetual nagging temptation” as C. S. Lewis referred to it. I knew, too, that I had ‘unfinished business’, to paraphrase Martin Heidegger. I also learnt more on friendship. And this I must admit, did in some good measure frighten me. For I was, for the better part, almost entirely left alone. This awareness would haunt me for years to come and it was not a good thing. It was like coming to the sudden realisation that as much as you might love the world, you will never get to experience all of it.


He then secretly blessed them through the soap suds and the potato crates

https://unsplash.com/photos/EroYdeZY71I

The young priest Grigori G. Popov was now unemployed. It seemed that there were “two” Gospels. They should have informed him of this during orientation week, he thought, or at the very least, made a note of it in the course handbook. He made the hard decision to stick with the older version. Unemployed priests who opted to receive the “older version” would find some few hours of work at Flemington Markets. Grigori G. Popov chose the late night cleaning shift; he would put on his yellow uniform and waterproof overshoes with pride and honour. He remembered the “putting on of the vestment prayers” when he would prepare for the Divine Liturgy, and these he would now recite once more… I will enter Thy House, and in Thy fear, I will worship toward Thy Holy Temple. Though no one knew he was once a priest, they would instinctively call him “Father” and he would rejoice, Lord, how he would rejoice. He then secretly blessed them through the soap suds and the potato crates.[7]

[1] https://paddysmarkets.com.au/history/

[2] https://www-s3-live.kent.edu/s3fs-root/s3fs-public/file/2f%20Stein.pdf

[3] https://ro.uow.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1679&context=infopapers

[4] https://orthodoxwiki.org/Philokalia

[5] https://www.amazon.com.au/Art-Prayer-Timothy-Ware/dp/0571191657

[6] As I now write it is closer to 35 years from that Sunday morning of the 25th of January, 1987, when I was admitted into the priestly ranks of the Eastern Orthodox Church, ordained by the then primate of the Greek Orthodox Church of Australia, His Eminence Archbishop Stylianos. The ordination took place on the Feast Day of Saint Gregory Nazianzus.

[7] This micro-story was originally published in Southerly (70)1, 2010. It belongs to the longer collection titled: “Short Stories off the Wing”. Here I have made some few changes but the essence of the story remains the same. It is a good example of how my little stories are inspired by real events [or biographies] or at other times by an observation in real time which might manifest onto another landscape.

The world at this moment is looking towards Europe with a broken heart

But Jesus said to him, “Put your sword in its place, for all who take the sword will perish by the sword.” (Matt. 26:52)

“Hullo, my relatives.” (Native American greeting)

“Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children. This is not a way of life at all in any true sense. Under the clouds of war, it is humanity hanging on a cross of iron.” (Letter to Everett “Swede” Hazlett, July 22,1957, Dwight D. Eisenhower)

“All war is a symptom of man's failure as a thinking animal.” (Once There Was A War, 1958, John Steinbeck)

“The cocks don’t crow to wake the morning, [t]here’s not as yet a sound of man, [t]he owls in glades call out their warnings, [a]nd ash trees creak and creak again." (Taras Shevchenko)

 

The world at this moment is looking towards Europe with a broken heart, and those among us, that are compelled to prayer, send supplications to the Creator that a benevolent intercession may quickly put an end to this war which has broken out in the Ukraine. May it be the brave Ukrainian people survive and endure best they can and that the Russian political leaders come swiftly to their right senses. Howard Zinn, the American World War II veteran, philosopher and historian, expressed the awfulness of war with powerful comprehension as to its ultimate cost: “[t]here is no flag large enough to cover the shame of killing innocent people.” We are all members of humanity, “consideration of others” and  “philanthropy”,[1] the defining characteristic of this universal body of ‘blood-beat’. And unpalatable as this might sometimes seem to us, that we are ‘tied to the hip’ regardless of our nationalistic or eschatological predispositions, this world is all we have. Our one and only opportunity to live out the meaningfulness of “compassion”, that is, to suffer together with our neighbour. To make our life, and the lives of those around us, the best they could possibly be. All else, however spectacular or mesmerizing it might very well be, like flying rockets to Mars and the like, is at best but a welcome bonus. At worst little more than a distraction, a bug about the ears, to the plaintive cries of all those who are needlessly maimed and killed in theatres of ruinous conflict across the world. The only real winner is the military-industrial complex and the defence industries which drive it. As Metropolitan Anthony Bloom has said: “[t]here is no idol that doesn’t claim blood.” [2] The sad truth that throughout the history of the human race, it has been much easier to find the devil in ourselves, and even easier still to point him out in others, than to genuinely seek after the Creator, or the ‘Form of the Good’, in our own hearts. And, yet, I must confess, there are hours when it could be hard to know the difference, like discerning what stands behind the shadow of a shape caught between the rays of light and the cold ground.

                          

[1] https://www.etymonline.com/word/humanity

[2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l2OtD5OkHHo