BPR 47 | 2020
—Sifnos, 1985
First learn the touch of April light, 
a shining that is also a singing 
warm as wine and sharp as the music 
drifting from the tavernas. 
Your eyes will drink this, your life 
will never forget the taste of it.
Figure the churches, the scattered holy 
confusion of saints in every village, 
among the fields, at the sea’s edge. 
All their candles burn with tears 
and practical prayers.
Count the windfall of wildflowers at Easter, thousands 
wearing all the blues of antique skies, the purples 
borrowed from icons. Every day they open to echo 
pink, yellow, lavender sunrise and the orange and 
red wheels of voracious sunsets.
Understand the donkeys. 
They speak a nuanced language of pleasure, 
refusal, and dream. The drum of their useful hooves 
on uneven stones in the streets is another 
kind of wisdom
Notice the air so clear that midnight’s stars 
are multiplied over and over, nourishing as the fishes 
that fed the multitude. Listen to the spare 
clarity that allows room for an argument 
in the next village to fly, easily heard, 
through your open window along with conversations 
of goats, roosters, and turkeys wistful 
on the next mountain.
Barter for a Sifnos bag from a village woman. 
Of handmade cloth, these are present in all colors, 
made to tie into a bundle worn on the back or over 
the shoulder. Farmers take their lunches in these, 
workmen their small tools, draping the tough, soft satchel 
over a donkey’s saddle.
Your bag will become its own state of being, 
even the wide sea lives in white stones 
you collected from the waters that polished them. 
Press a blood-red poppy to tuck beside the stones 
and the folded voice of the fisherman calling his wares. 
Put in the startle of church bells, the turns of the paths, 
the heavy, sharp-thorned roses from dooryards 
keeping a powerful heirloom fragrance all summer.
Save the noisy bustle of black-garbed women 
crowding the village bakery soon after sunrise 
when the warm loaves are brought into life 
from a stone oven and handed out by a boy 
with flowers in his shirt pocket.
Keep the rented whitewashed house 
and its garden full of artichokes. Bring 
the kitten who came and would not leave. 
Harness the song played by the barber one volatile 
midnight and his dance on the taverna table.
Take it, all of it, in a few words and some colors singing 
sunlight, the topaz dusk, a swarm of stars— 
bright bag with its drawstring.



