David Selzer is a writer of poetry, prose fiction, screenplays and stage plays. He embraces digital platforms to share his work of more than fifty years… READ MORE


  • MOUNTAIN VIEW

    Some time after midnight, when the bars have closed,

    the hoots and laughter of revellers

    on the stone-clad stairs wakes us. Much later

    wind, billowing through the open corridors

    of the steel framed building, shakes our door

    intermittently like some errant soul.

    In the shallow valley below the hotel

    a cock crows above the gusts and the rattles.

     

    ***

     

    In the morning a warm west wind blows

    over the sea from what was Carthage.

    The valley slopes gradually to a cove.

    Before tourism this was wilderness –

    only the tideless waves on the gritty beach.

    Now there are a score or so of sun loungers,

    two tavernas, two supermarkets and a bar –

    and some smallholdings amongst the scrub.

     

    ***

     

    On the other side of the valley are

    two more resort hotels like this, open

    from May to October. At night, they are lit

    like cruise ships. Beyond is Mount Vasiliko –

    wind turbines on its slopes and, at its summit,

    a monitoring post. Mare Nostrum

    is everybody’s – a dozen or more navies,

    and thousands of desperate optimists.

     

    ***

     

    From the terrace by the pool, we can see,

    through mountainous clefts, Mount Ida’s peak.

    At the summit is Timios Stavros,

    the Holy Cross chapel. In a cave

    on its slopes, Zeus was born. Swifts call above us –

    ecumenical, celestial, their flight

    calligraphic. Crete is shaped like a

    scabbardfish, feinting between Europe

    and Africa. I think of the empty,

    wintry rooms – the patience of islanders

    used to long absences.

     

     

     



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