An Introduction to Modern Greek in South Bend, Indiana, 1967
For Vassilis Lambropoulos
Artemis Leontis
And Kostalena Michelaki
Quince and pomegranate? Sage? Rosemary?
I didnÕt know anyone who even knew
what those things were, so at BennerÕs Market
on Mishawaka Avenue, right next
to our new templeÑthe Gospel Center
United Missionary ChurchÑI bought
pistachio nutsÑA Product of GreeceÑ
and WelchÕs White Grape Juice. I carried them
like holy food to Potawatomi
Park where at picnic tables below oaks
I read Zorba the Greek. I was fifteen
and there had never been a loneliness
or a longing as exquisite as mine.
I wandered over dusty hills in Crete
slaking my thirst with WelchÕs. I sauntered
through dark alleys in the medieval town
on RhodesÑbuilt by the Knights Hospitaler
after Saladin conquered JerusalemÑ
and smelled souvlaki grilling over fire,
eating pistachios to satisfy
my hunger. When lake effect snow began
to drift down from the sullen skies above
South Bend, I discovered Odysseus
Elytis and learned that in those poems
was some new place. But I walked there
in the sun on a beach sprinkled with white
and black pebbles, with a slightly older
dark-haired olive-skinned woman who whispered
just above the AegeanÕs gentle wash:
E thalassa, thalassa, thalassa.
Appeared in Notre Dame Review
Summer, 2004