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Yannis Saoulis |
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The
Story BARBA-VARIAS The
shade of the multi-storey across the road is once again dividing Barba-Varias'
joint into a bright and a dusky side, this afternoon.The narghile unprepared
and the small jouras untouched for years hang on the wall below the dust-covered
decorative fish-nets. These also are all dichotomized by the same dividing
line drawn by the shade of the multi-storey across the road, this sultry
summer afternoon. Barba-Varias
takes no longer care of his joint. Half his groceries are thrown away
rotten, unused. He scarcely ever orders tsipouro. Spiders are more and
more spreading their webs where walls kiss. He, ever blue and almost voiceless,
sits in the shade leaned against the green wall. Today
all is the same as the door opens. He turns left. "Not
this nerd again" he thinks. "The hell with these bastards; they've flooded
the world with their slime." "Is
there anything to eat?" asks the visitor, a bloke not more than thirty,
well built. He stands up straight. He wears jeans and trainers. In his
hands he is holding books. He also, is a student in that posh school,
school of economics, that is. "No,
we're closing" replies Barba-Varias abruptly. "Oh,
I don't want anything fancy. Some bread only, a tomato cut in four, some
olives and a glass of ouzo. A quick snack and I'm off" answers the young
man. "There's
nothing left , bugger off" says again Barba-Varias louder this time and
without even looking at the young man. "Why
are you being so rude? I didn't hurt you with anything, old man, did I?
I simply asked for a mouthful of bread, and I'm going to pay for it". "I
don't sell to your kind" barks Barba-Varias."Nerds and phony moustaches
I don't serve. I won't be disgraced. Go back to where you belong". Barba-Varias
remembers this 'black ship' well. He remembers him since he took the small
jouras without asking and disgraced it playing what he thought as a hashish
song. He didn't say anything then, he withstood it; but now he can't take
it, he nags him straight. "Listen
here, old man, even we worth something,
you know" answers the young man, turning ferocious himself. "Yeah,
OK... but now I'm closing. Leave!"
says Barba-Varias in a disregarding manner. "Look
here, old man, I only have respect for your age and I won't be treated
like this. I'm bearing the same soul as you do and..." Before
the young man finishes his sentence Barba-Varias replies even louder: "Same
soul? What same soul? The hell with you claiming that we're of the same
kind, me and a nerd like yourself. Out! Go to..."
... "He stirred me now". The
young man without loosing his temper, squeezes on the back of the straw-chair
next to the door which is still open. "What
do you think, old man, the world is lost with your generation ? You think
that we feel less not doing joints? Different times then, different times
now. But the woe's the same. My grandma came from Turkey. My grandpa abandoned
her to spend his days in the joints... But why am I talking to you now? To you there's nothing else than the rebetes". "No,
there isn't...go now...Out! " "Well
Barba-Varia I think you are mistaken. Look at me well. I, yes, I am Markos, and Batis, and Papazoglou, and Kavouras,
and Salonikios, and Hadjichristos, and everything holly to you, all in
one...And what is more, I come from Asia Minor. I don't only listen to
baglamas and bouzoukis, but also to santouris and liras and church singers
and 'amanes' and Rumanian dances. I am all that and yet more; I was raised
with it. I don't only sing hashish songs. I also sing songs from Smyrni,
songs by Papasideris, songs from Hepirus and Crete and Cyprus... and songs
by Hadjidakis if you wish. Those buried under the marble tombstones, they
are me. Your bitterness won't let you see, but so be it... After all,
you seeded all that in me. You and your genre.
I heard my grandmother's sorrow and anger and here I am. Let's finish it; I, Barba-Varia, am your apprentice. I am , whether you like it or
not". On
his way out, the young man drags the straw-chair down and slams the door
behind him. Barba-Varias
cracked... The sun went down and the line of the shade of the multi-storey
across the road now passes over him and 'cuts' him in two. He thinks of
what he just heard with disbelief. "Yeah,
all right... Batis is risen". He wakes up and walks to the door with uncertainty.
He opens the door. He leans forward and looks left and right...
Nothing. The young bloke had disappeared in the crowd. He closes the door
behind him and walks back into his kitchen. He takes out a tomato and
cuts it in four. He sprinkles some salt and oregano over it and adds five-six
olives. He cuts two slices of
bread. Then, he opens the cupboard where he keeps the 'good stuff' and
drains the last bottle of tsipouro into a glass. Takes the tray and walks
to the table by the door. Leaves the tray on the table and lifts the straw-chair
that's still lying on the floor. He stands behind the window where it
still bright and murmurs to himself: "Reborn
he says...Papasideris...what Papasideris... Turkey he says... Hadjidakis...
Who's Hadjidakis?" He
bites an olive and takes a sip from the 'good stuff'. "His
grandma came from Turkey... Go to..." Barba-Varias
feels like he is suffocating. He stands up and takes the tray to the kitchen.
Leaves it on the bench, grabs his keys and his string of beads and walks
to the exit. As he locks he murmurs: "I
don't even know his name, God dam nit". He
walks towards his house now. A couple of steps and he's out in the open,
away from the shade of the multi-storey across the road, Barba-Varias.
PEOPLE
DREAM OF THE SEA People
dream of the sea, On
the sterling sands I fell in love with you You
also seem like part of the sea On
the sterling sands I fell in love with you Track
10 THAT
DAY The
day I see you at my front I
wish your forehead could be spread Upon
the meeting of our hearts That
day will soon be coming Track
11 WEARY
BLOKE Weary
bloke A
sad wave you used to be Weary
bloke
What
can it be, this blue, this sprightly blue that occasionally drips into
my being right to the tips of my toes? What
can it be, this rock that smiles at me under the crystal water frisking
with the magic sparkles of our sun? What
can it be, these pine trees constantly leaning from a distance, waving
at us with the consent of the wind? What
can it be, these tunes that from the distant depths are delivered to us
by our history? What
can it be, this song created by mellow Ionian souls, overwhelmed by the
toll of our blue bell? Yannis
Saoulis |
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