
A few loose pages of poems tucked in between an old tattered book, travelled across the Atlantic in my mum's book bag. Eventually, "Sun The First Together With Variations on A Sunbeam" (Ηλιος ο πρώτος, παραλλαγές πάνω σε μιαν αχτίδα, 1943) found its way on top of the old HiFi turntable console, a place of honour, next to Robert Frost. Poetry resonates deeply with Greek people and my parents were often walking testaments to this. He wasn't just any poet. He won the 1979 Nobel Prize in Literature.
As I grew older I appreciated his poetry even more once it was put to music, of course, by legendary Mikis Theodorakis. "Axion Esti-It Is Worthy" became an anthem of sorts to the modern Greek of 1964 and beyond. My dad, even though he wasn't very modern, connected some how to Elytis words. And through the wicked combination of Elytis and Theodorakis I also found a connection... with my dad.
I almost forgot.
He'd pop the tape in the car and we'd listen to the music during the morning weekend drive to open the restaurant. He'd ask, "do you understand what he is saying here, Tzaki?" If I didn't understand he'd stop the tape and try to translate the word, the meaning. And dad was spot on, with the meaning of Elytis. Dad said that he is speaking to 'us', not the ancients or about the ancients, but to me and you.
And indeed Elytis, "Unlike others, he did not turn back to Ancient Greece or Byzantium but devoted himself exclusively to today's Hellenism, of which he attempted - in a certain way based on psychical and sentimental aspects - to build up the mythology and the institutions. His main endeavour has been to rid his people's conscience from remorses unjustifiable, to complement natural elements through ethical powers, to achieve the highest possible transparency in expression and to finally succeed in approaching the mystery of light, "the metaphysic of the sun" - according to his own definition."
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Look its plastered! |
And today's modern Greek has forgotten the wave of positive influences that Elytis had on the attitude and worth of self. It's 101 years from his birth, holding a book, poems in flight and Google has shown Odysseus Elytis in his quintessential sailor's hat with the Olive Tree, a cluster of grapes and the Boat. Why?
Because Elytis had once said, "If you deconstruct Greece, at the end you will see that you are left with an olive tree, a vineyard and a boat. Which means that you can rebuild it," Wow, his words just jump off the page considering the climate and chaos that Greece finds itself. Thanks for reminding us Google.
And my mum's book of poetry has lost its cover. It has yellowed and its tips have turned in; it is well thumbed. It now sits proudly on my office shelf along with Frost, Tennyson, Noyes (nothing beats The Highwayman) and a full collection of Dr Seuss.