Showing posts with label Eros. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eros. Show all posts

Friday, May 26, 2023

Fly Away! Fly Away!

 by Brett Rutherford

     Adapted from Archias, The Greek Anthology, v, 59 

You, above it all, tell me
“One should fly from Love.”
You, neither philosopher
     nor naturalist, seem not
to know I have no wings.

Birds flutter up
at the slightest alarm;
even from hawks
the small prey
dart away. 

So what am I to do?
Two legs I have,
     and short ones at that.
It is easy for you
with lamp and stylus
to advise the love-lorn.
Have you even seen daylight
since all that scribbling started?
That crowd around your gate,
offering coins for counsel,
do they think you an oracle?

I am doomed, I tell you.
By day I slink along
     house walls in shadow.
By night I avoid
     big, open spaces,

but I know he is up there,
     that sly one,
wings wider than eagle-span,
eyes keen, my name
already inscribed
on his dread arrow.

How fly, as helpless
as a barnyard chicken,
when Eros flaps about?

Oh, what’s the use? By dawn
I’ll be in love with someone!

Tuesday, February 14, 2023

Valentine's Day



by Brett Rutherford

The answer to everything
seems to be shooting.

Arrows in hearts
have brought me nothing
but misery. Worse yet
for poor Sebastian,
The Saint of Love
as it is actually
practiced.

Pink is a passing
hue, the moment before
the blood spurts out.

Deer dead,
air bags pierced,
substations shattered,
balloons plummeting,
lost kites targeted
by Tomahawk missiles;

even Eros, if he flew
to bring me good
tidings, is doomed,
a downed mallard
locked in the jaw
of a drooling hound.

Love is a bullet.
The grizzle-bearded
hunter rules the day.
Will you be my —
Splat.

Tuesday, January 3, 2023

Either-Or

by Brett Rutherford

     Adapted from Meleager, The Greek Anthology, xii, 86.

Aphrodite it is,
   soft, curved
     and ever-smiling,
     who lays forth
liquid flame,
compelling men
     to women’s charms.

Eros, it is, tender,
     tall, eluding
one day and giving
     the next,
the North Star
    of male-to-male
     affection.

What is my Pole,
    my inclination?
How shall the world
turn me, and to whom?
Boy Eros in Hermes guise,
or Cypris, bride and mother?

Whom will I see,
     curled up
beneath my morning
     blanket; whose
hair will drive me mad
     as my fingers run
through the abundant curls
of the exhausted sleeper?

     She, or He?

In dreams I’ve heard
the Morning Star sigh
as Aphrodite admits
she cannot outpace
her mischievous son.
Regarding me,
    she shakes her head
       confessing,
“Eros, the arrogant brat
     has won again!”

 

Hubris

by Brett Rutherford

Adapted from Meleager, The Greek Anthology, xii, 101

Myiscus, one morning after,
dismisses my library
with a bored glance,
tugs at my sleeve
as I write a poem.

“Do you love me better
than those old epigrams
you collect and copy?”
he asks me, inserting
his question mid-stanza.

I put the stylus down.
“I lived for poetry
     until you struck me down.
Now I am not so sure.”

He laughs. In him,
some demon triumphs,
as if to boast,
     “See what I’ve done.
The proud scholar
     is now debased. My foot
is on his neck.
I’ve furrowed his wise brow
with lines of worry and jealousy.”

“Don’t be so smug,”
I caution him.
Nobody makes anybody
do anything
    unless some force compels.
Eros makes even Zeus
     do things his wife
would never countenance.”

Smugly, the boy leaves me
to go off to discus practice,
while I return to poetry.
This line,
     was it mine?
or did Callimachus,
as drunk with this love
as I am, say it already?

 

Monday, December 26, 2022

An Interior Temple

by Brett Rutherford

     Adapted from Meleager, The Greek Anthology, xii, 57

Praxiteles of old
     made delicate art
     in bronze and marble,
fooled men to believe
     a lifeless copy
     moved and breathed
in the confines
     of a captured moment.

Today’s Praxiteles, an
     almost-beardless youth,
has other powers. His hands
reach into my heart
and carve a figure there:
dread Eros, the rogue-brat!

This young one even
makes things inside my head,
already so clogged
with mazes and Minotaurs:
the latest, a many-chambered
temple where he alone
merits my worship.

As faint as fly-buzz
I hear the tiny hammers,
the dragging of stones,
as my interior temple
grows apace. Shall I

be better for this
acropolis complex
within my cerebellum?
Within my mind’s eye’s
eye, I spy an interior peristyle.
Am I permitted to kneel inside,
an ageless, robed
hierophant, hands
extended to one
who touches me back?

For be not fooled.
Its arms go up and down.
It even speaks.
(Beneath the god,
machineries below
give life to stone
and breath to lips.)

So dreaming, I worship
Praxiteles, and Eros obey.
Waking, I pass him by,
all eyes, and he pretends
he does not know me.

Oh, do not build and abandon
sky-palaces! Steal not the soul
in which proud columns rise.
Embrace, Praxiteles,
     this tortured dreamer!

Eros, my heart,
Praxiteles, my mind,
Priapus, down below.
I am a trinity. Pray
that my arms and legs
drawn hither and thither
do not fly off!

 

 

Sunday, December 25, 2022

Of the Same Name

Praxiteles' Eros - Roman Copy


by Brett Rutherford

     After Meleager, The Greek Anthology,  xii, 56

How dare anyone so fair
have such a name as
     Praxiteles?
Should not the name
have been forever retired
after the Athenian carved
from Parian marble the gods
themselves? He made an Eros,
of Aphrodite born, by hand
and eye the gods permitted to see
without the punishment
     of blindness. 

Now Eros torments us,
endows today’s Praxiteles,
an idling son of no one
in particular, a youth
   among us watched
as he grew perfect,
who now, at twenty,
despite his indolence
looks fit to scale Olympus. 

Or will this living
     statue proxy be,
dispensing love affairs with ease,
while god-born Eros attends
the needs of the distracted gods?

It might be a good arrangement.
When there is much tedium
in Heaven, the gods come down
to bother nymphs and shepherds,
to woo away our mistresses,
and abduct by night the lads we adore. 

When there is too much intercourse
with those above, the crops
grow unreliable. Mountains smoke.
The rival temples demand
expensive sacrifices.

And oh, the demigods
     the poor maidens bear
to the despair of mortal
     relatives! 

With two love-gods about,
one here, and one above,
Hera will be vanquished,
and old wives silenced.

From the son of Cronos down
to the lowest demigod,
all heads will turn;
all beds will be fair play.

And as above, so below,
each one in turn shall love
and be loved, till all
fall down exhausted,
and die of old age, smiling.

There will scarcely be time
for the begetting of children.

 

 

 

Spitting Image



by Brett Rutherford

     Adapted from Meleager, The Greek Anthology,xii, 76, 78

If Eros, my full-grown
     Nemesis,
stood sans the bow,
     the quiver, the arrows,
one foot before the other,
     just so,

and if you traced
     arms, shoulders, neck,
     the full-mouthed, high-
     cheeked, god-nosed
visage, and all the rest —

omitting those wings,
    of course,

then made Zoilus,
the potter’s son, pose
until each line and curve
was captured, lay one
upon the other. The same!

Let Eros put on
     the garb of youth,
the chlamys so
     provocative of desire,
then don the cap,
     the petasus,
or, better yet,
the cap suspended
by neck-string
behind the neck
as boys are wont
on windy days
to wear them. 

Trace this, lay one
outline upon the other —
Eros — Zoilus — the same!


 

 

Thursday, December 22, 2022

Anti-Eros

 by Brett Rutherford

     Adapted and expanded from Meleager, The Greek Anthology, v, 179

Eros, if I lay hands on you,
     you’re done for.
At the next sign
     of your sneaky arrival
I’ll grab the bow, that
    fancy Scythian quiver
and the whole lot
     of those vicious arrows,
and burn them up,

bow and string, the cloth,
the fletching feathers, all
into my hearth-fire,
up in smoke. See how
you like it then, powerless
except by persuasion
to make us men run about
like ants or termites.

How can I write
serious poetry
when all I can think about
is the pursuit, the conquest,
the jealous rage, and then
the renunciation, as if

you were not the god at all
of loving, but of falling
out of love. Anti-Eros
you are, diverting us
from our best instinct:
first love, best love.

Ah, there you are! See
how I have thieved you
of your quiver? Aim not
your bow like a club
at my forehead and listen
for once, ridiculous son
of Aphrodite!

“I attend,” the little god said.

“This is madness!” I charged.
“First this one, then that one,
and then another.
Heliodora, on and off,
then Zenophila,
and then some random boy
whose eyes flash
mischievously.” —

“What is it you want,
Meleager? To love them all?
Monday. Wesnesday, Friday
Heliodora’s lot —
Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday
with Zenophila —
and Saturday for boys,
as many as you wish,
     like candy?”

Oh, I had not thought of that.
“That would be terrible,”
     protested I.
“I’d waste away. My legs
would shrink to spindles.
And imagine the jealousy:
each one to do as she pleases
four days a week! Imagine
the whole city rocked by quakes
if they should ever meet in public!”

At this, a boyish laugh erupted
and the god snickered. “Beware
to get what you wish for! Give back!”

I handed him the quiver.

                                        “Well,
I demanded. What is it now?
Shall I just bare my chest
and take the shaft you came
to torment me with? Your
visits are frequent, as though
we were cousins, as though
you thought you were doing me
a favor. With me you are a lynx
pacing around a flock of sheep.” —

At this the boy leaned up, and,
taking my head in his hands,
planted a chaste kiss upon my brow.

“Would you refuse your next
adventure in love? You are not
supposed to see me coming!”

I closed my eyes. I did not
feel the sting, but heard
the air give way before
the approaching arrow.
The light winged sandals,

the wings outspread
framed the dawn light
window, and he was gone.

I am afraid to go out.
What if the next creature I see
is the one I must love?

But then I smiled,
for today is Saturday.



 



Sunday, December 18, 2022

Love On Top

 by Brett Rutherford

     Adapted from Meleager, The Greek Anthology

Really, Eros! You threw me down.
I was no match; I tumbled,
and there you are on top of me.

Worse than wrestling, this;
more like arena gladiators.

Why not just finish me off,
foot on my neck and all?
Even in the pale dawn light —
when I lay here waiting
for the one who did not come —
I recognized you. Heavy
you are — how you have grown
from child to manhood.

Eros grown up is
     even more dangerous.
Where love by proxy
    was your boyish business,

so now you come yourself
     to possess me.
What? No bow, no quiver,
     no stinging arrows?
Really? Just you … and me?

I hope this is some random
     visitation. Truly,
to be overcome as I have
     done to others
is amusing. Do what you will.

But not my heart, mind you:
     set that not alight.
You cannot burn it, Eros!
It is already ash. Get on
with your pulsations, make
me scream the names
    of everyone I longed for, 

but this is all in vain.
Leave the back way
     so no one sees,
or better yet, just spread
those pinions and wing
up and out the open window.

 And mind you take
your sandals, cap, and staff.
I’ll never tell — I pr
omise!


 

 

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Lost and Found

 by Brett Rutherford

     adapted from Meleager, The Greek Anthology, v, 177, 176

Missing: one feral child.
Just as the city opened its gates
to admit the farmer and fisherman,
he fled the other way. Say, did you see

how he flew from someone's bedroom --
a child too young to know such things --
and was last seen in the treetops
and then who knows where, as though
the unmanageable child had wings.

If you see such a one, almost naked,
laughing and chattering, foul-mouthed,
prancing about with toy bow-and-arrow,
send word to Zenophila. Poor woman,
she doesn't know the father's name:
the Sky -- the Earth -- the Sea -- who knows?

Throughout the town this boy is hated.
His tricks have ruined marriages
and he is said to lead bad men
to even worse women.

So do not take him in if you prize
the peace of your household.
Summon Zenophila and her net.

Hark! Someone has seen him!
Send for the woman deceived
     who wishes such a being
     to share her hearth and table.

The little archer --
     they've got him cornered.
A ruby ring for whoever lays hands
     and holds him!
Now Zenophila comes -- make way --
fierce as a witch with an evil eye,
she chides the boy,
"Deinos, Eros, deinos!
Dreadful is Love, dreadful!"

Monday, November 28, 2022

Too Much of a Good Thing

by Brett Rutherford

     adapted from Meleager, The Greek Anthology, v. 57

Persistent as a seagull, a cormorant,
as arrogant as a pigeon in the square,
Eros descends on me, earth-bound,
hemmed into one city whose walls
I seldom leave out of sight: target

almost as predictable as a statue —
show me some mercy. Hot arrows
descend weekly, daily — in summer,
I swear, hourly — demanding I pursue
this one and that one, never-ending.

Is it my destiny to fall in love
with everything two-legged?
Before my loins give out, my soul
will part ways with me. Cruel boy,
making the fool of me, a soul, too,
has wings, and what if she leaves?

That Monster Child

The Victory of Eros, Metropolitan Museum


 by Brett Rutherford 

adapted from Meleager, The Greek Anthology, v. 178, v. 177

So there was some lump-sack
of a woman, pounding
at my door. “Come quick!”
she cried. “The mistress
has had your baby!”

“You?” I said. “Maid
of what lady?”—

                                “Zenophila.” —

“Ha!” What mischief is this?
I saw her two weeks back,
her belly as flat
as a school-girl’s.” —

“Nonetheless, there is a child.”

More amazed than angry,
I set out.
Doubtless some prank this was.
There would be laughter later,
     and then wine.

I took my time arriving.
Let them fret, who thought
they could amuse themselves
at my discomfort. But then,
I reached her door, and hearing
an infant’s cry, I froze.

Pushing me in, the maid
rushed over and took
from Zenophila’s arms
a shapeless wad of bedsheets,
a ruby face wrapped tight
in them as an Egyptian mummy.

“Acknowledge your child!” Zenophila
now shrieked, not even offering a hand
or rising to greet me. The nurse,
meanwhile, embared her breast to feed
the red-faced, pug-nosed monster,
its lips a-pucker with a frightful greed.
He'd drain her dry, I warranted,
and squall for more.

                                         “This — this
is not possible, “ protested I,
pointing to it, and then to her.
“Would you deny it?” protested she.
“Your child and mine. No one
was as surprised as me. I woke,
and there he was, all swaddled up.
I saw your face the moment
I looked at him.”

                                 “That’s not
the way it works!” I told her. “No one
delivers up a baby while she sleeps!
You would have been sick for months,
swollen like a behemoth. Old crones
would have been visiting, with charms
and baby-names.” The maid
regarded me and made the “crazy” sign.
But then this woman, in the bed
I had indeed shared with her, went on:
“You own a house. You need a wife.
There’s nothing to be done
but take us in.”

I was beside myself. “Sell it!”
I shouted. “If it has all its limbs,
some childless couple will take it.” —

“He’s perfect in every way.
A mother knows these things.”—

“He’s biting me!” the maid exclaimed,
pushing the bundle away from her.
“He has long fingernails and teeth,
and I swear he looked at me
indecently when I first showed my breast.”
The snub-nosed monster laughed at this,
and seemed to mumble in a unknown language.

I took a closer look. The cherub-face
bore no resemblance to my own.
It was an imp, a savage, an all-around
monster. “No, sell it this instant!
Ask any passing peddler if his house
is in the countryside, and if
his neighbors need a child to rear.
Let this one grow up to till the fields
or guard a flock of sheep or goats.”

Now came a flood of tears. Women
can be so monothematic when it comes
to matters of home and hearth, you know.
I wanted to prevaricate, to say,
“Already, poor woman, do I have a wife,
as barren as a salt mine, to whom”
I seldom speak, and wish to keep it so.”

But no, Greek weddings are anathema
to me, and as for infants, I view
them as a pestilence, best kept indoors
until they attain the age of reason.

Yet Zenophila was no schemer.
Investigation was called for. Ah, here,
the bed was aslant, one leg knocked off.
The coverings were ripped to tatters,
and oil-stains were everywhere.
“What happened here last night?”

I asked the maid. “Was she alone,
or was there a gentleman caller?”
Her fingers made the number “three.”
“Three gentlemen callers? Last night?”

Searching, I found
     a little pewter amulet
     Antaeus and Hercules encarved,
the kind that young wrestlers wear.

Waving the amulet, I accused her:
“Three! Three from the wrestling school!
Three in your bed! Deny it!”

“They offered a demonstration,”
the girl protested. “Since women are not
permitted to see the matches, how else
could I expand my learning?”

                                                             I bit
my tongue and did not say, “Try reading.”
“So they showed you their moves.
First on the floor where sandal scuffs
are rampant, and then they moved on
to the mattress — o wide enough it was
for three, and then for four.” —

                                                     “One thing
just led to another,” she said, not blushing.

“That neither they nor you have shame,”
I calmly conjectured, “reveals the truth.”

“Hand me the infant!” —

                                    “Oh, do not harm it!”

The maid complied. Slowly, I pulled
apart the folds of tight swaddling,
enough to see, at shoulder’s base
the thing I expected to find.

“You pretty fool! You have upended
the universe with your dalliance.
All is made clear. Attend and listen.
Just yesterday, in gloom of dusk
three boys stayed late to test
each other with their new-learned art.
They piled on one another grappling,
when who should come along
but that flying Eros, known as Cupid
to some, and seeing them,
and having one last lust-engendering
arrow, he set it loose at them.

A single love-shaft struck all three.
One said, in a passing sigh,
          'O Zenophila, in your arms
          I would expire tonight'

and the amatory accord was made.
Three yearned as one, and for the same
eyes, lips, breasts and belly.

So at your door they came, in amity,
intent to share one bed with you,
and, triple-charmed, poor girl,
there was nothing you could do.

So there they tangled their oiled limbs
and you fell in with all that flesh a-snarl
the same as Laocoön’s sons
amid the serpents of the Hellespont.

The little monster followed them in.
You did not notice him hovering there.
He likes to watch, you know. Doubt me?
Then look and see.”

                                        I handed it her.
She peeked where I had parted
the tossed-off bedsheet wrapping.

“A wing! A feathered wing!” —

“None other than Eros himself,
Son of Aphrodite by who knows whom.
The little voyeur was hovering
when up and around him the sheet
went flying. With every move
he netted himself until at last
he lay there, immobilized.

“What a houseguest you have here!
Not one but two stepfathers has he.
One the god of war, stern Ares,
the other volcano-belching Hephaestus.
His grandmother is the whole wide sea,
but father he has none, and so is doomed
to be the begetter of random loving,
the favored sport of our kind.

“Somewhere inside that mess of cloth
are his little bow and a quiver,
most certainly empty now, whose arrows
turn rational men to madmen
and make fools of wise women.”

The maid now took me to task.
“Your knowledge of the gods,
great Meleager, befits a poet,
but is there not a marvel here?
What if this is some demigod,
newborn of a poet’s forethought,
new under the sun and moon,
a winged child, to bring his mother
honor and to enhance your fame?
Why not adopt the child?” —

                                                    “Yes, dear,”
pled Zenophila. “A wonder child.
Will he not add to your fame and fortune?”

“No to both of you. We must release him.
The wrath of Aphrodite is not to be borne.
Unless you set him free, no love
will come unbidden to anyone.
No suitor will plead, no girl or boy
will be patted expectantly, or sought
for trade for this or that, to surrender.
There will be no affection for fun.
Sexless will the whole city go
except for the bored and dutiful
husband-and-wife coupling.”

And so, I unbound the cloth
and up and out the monster went,
two wings and a bow and a quiver,
a flash of pink flesh into the glare
of sun and the birds sang out for joy.