Pensioners waiting outside a closed National Bank branch and hoping
to get their pensions, argue with a bank employee through a closed door
in Iraklio on the island of Crete: photo by Stefanos Rapanis/Reuters, 29 June 2014
Michael Longley: Laertes
When he found Laertes alone on the tidy terrace, hoeing
Around a vine, disreputable in his gardening duds,
Patched and grubby, leather gaiters protecting his shins
Against brambles, gloves as well, and, to cap it all,
Sure sign of his deep depression, a goatskin duncher,
Odysseus sobbed in the shade of a pear-tree for his father
So old and pathetic that all he wanted then and there
Was to kiss him and hug him and blurt out the whole story,
But the whole story is one catalogue and then another,
So he waited for images from that formal garden,
Evidence of a childhood spent traipsing after his father
And asking for everything he saw, the thirteen pear-trees,
The apple-trees, forty fig-trees, the fifty rows of vines
Ripening at different times for a continuous supply,
Until Laertes recognised his son and, weak at the knees,
Dizzy, flung his arms around the neck of great Odysseus
Who drew the old man fainting to his breast and held him there
And cradled like driftwood the bones of his dwindling father.
Michael Longley: Laertes (after Odyssey 24.226-348), from Gorse Fires, 1991
A
woman pulling a shopping cart reacts outside a closed Eurobank branch
in Athens. Greece closed its banks and imposed capital controls on
Sunday to check the
growing strains on its crippled financial system, bringing the prospect
of being forced out of the euro into plain sight: photo by Alkis Konstantinidis/Reuters, 29 June 2015
(A duncher, v. line 5, is a flat cap, in Belfast dialect.)
ReplyDeleteLaertes is lucky to have a garden for growing a bit of food. Greece today, tomorrow Puerto Rico (72 billion in debt amid a moribund economy; and Obama, no Odysseus, looks away). The oligarchs won’t be satisfied until they’ve made us all office temps in the administration of Hell.
ReplyDeleteAnd magnanimous souls that they are, they'll be letting us have a little extra something, just to get through to the end of the month, at only 18.6%.
ReplyDeleteToo much month left at the end of the money . . . that's the plight of far too many of the world's "citizens".
ReplyDeleteAnd what a sad photo.
ReplyDeleteBANK HOLIDAY IN HELLAS
ReplyDeleteLet us tend to our gardens
Rather than tender be.
Sadness in Hellas
ReplyDeleteHumanity
Illegal
tender, ever
green
Yannis Ritsos: The Unhinged Shutter
ReplyDelete