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Poems

April 2003

Mornings I walk past the first cemetery of Athens

by A E Stallings

Like a widow, every day the grey Dawn comes
To the Proto Nekrotapheío, and sweeps the crumbs
Of Night from tombstones, and the marble busts.

The stone cutter in his workshop contemplates,
Chisel in hand, the blank face of clean slates.
The waitress at the café mops and dusts.

A priest sits at his newspaper and tarries
Over the headlines and obituaries.

Soon, the mourners gather there to drain
The thick black liquid to the bitter grain.
At the Office of Endings, a hunched man taps his thumbs.

Four diggers play a hand of cards to kill
A little time; two withered florists fill
The old foam wreaths with new chrysanthemums.

A. E. Stallings


A E Stallingss latest collection of poetry is Hapax (TriQuarterly)
more from this author


This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 21 April 2003, on page 0
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