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.

The Old Man from Bucharest

September 12th, 2011

Bucharest, Romania

A sharp glance to the left and there he was, my old man.

Earlier today on my morning walk I noticed a charismatic looking old man sitting on the steps leading down to the Piata Romana train terminal. As my eyes fell on him I straightaway felt that pleasurable warmth we might feel when we see a loved one coming nearer from the distance. “Hullo old man”, I whispered to myself, “we two have met before.” He was tall, thin, with a frowzy silvery beard, and ascetic in his appearance. I would guess his age somewhere in the seventies. He was wearing a long brown coat which fell below the knees and which reminded me of a huge poster I had once seen in Istanbul of Turkmenistan aksakals. Walking on I decided to take a seat at the nearby bus-stop before heading to the hotel for a late breakfast and a change of shirt. Within a few minutes I sensed a welcome presence approaching to share my bench. A sharp glance to the left and there he was, my old man. Thereupon I also noticed the eyes; a dark shade of green and a little sunken. They were peaceful, comprehending eyes. I felt them looking into me, through and past the boundaries of my flesh. As I have felt before with the elders of the desert. We stayed together, the old man and me, for the better part of two hours. We sat quietly observing the world and listening to the stories. Now and then we turned to look at each other. He then left disappearing into the busy street. Who was he and where did he go, Michael? I would think our phlegmatic Irishman Samuel Beckett would have liked this picture. We are all waiting. The not too easy task is to identify things and to give them their name.

N.B. The image in this entry is not of the old man in the story. After much searching online this striking photograph I have added here is amazingly close. My beautiful "old man" would not permit for me to take his photograph. MGM

Draft for a little story after a chance encounter

An old man stepped out into the bright light and headed towards Piata Romana. He looked about with the gaze of the barn-owl and walked off into the direction of the bus-stop where others were also waiting. His disorganized flowing silvery beard and his balding head did not detract from the compelling loveliness of his countenance. Though he could have done with a good scrubbing and his clothes were in need of a wash, there was yet this ‘cleanliness’ about him that you would not have considered him in any manner soiled. The younger man with the laptop in his hands, next to whom the old man from Bucharest sat to rest, was also balding but was clean shaven for his time had not yet come. The old man was carrying a small suitcase. “They usually do” the younger man thought to himself, “…these types of fellows seem to always be carrying suitcases and do not go for shoe-laces either.” The younger man, the one whose time had not yet come, peered into the suitcase which was held together by two large luggage straps. He spotted a fleece blanket of different colours and a gold-leaf trumpet. He also thought he could make out a plume of white feathers. The old man and the younger man exchanged glances, each accepting and recognizing the presence of the other. Their eyes scanned the crowd with their heads moving in unison left to right, up and down, precisely as the moment would require. Now and then their attention was lost to a robin or to a leaf from the black locust. And the old man and the younger man would look at each other, acknowledging the beauty in the world which goes by many names. The younger man offered the old man a Romanian pretzel; he took it without saying a word except to nod his head in approval. The old man from Bucharest with the disorganized flowing silvery beard reached into his torn coat and pulled out a small monumental tree. He then jumped to his feet and with episcopal dignity lowered his head and touched his chest with his right hand. The younger man did the same. But the old man did not leave until the younger man took off his shoes and offered them to the outstretched hands which, from the wrist up, were covered in thick white down.