
Dear Mr. Zambaras:
ServesUright.com regrets to inform you that your application to register the name Saffilis Zaengmac as your lawful nom de plume cannot be accepted due to the fact that said aforementioned name was duly registered by one Goask Elgart on June 20, 1972.
Illegibly yours,
(signed)
Saffilis Zaengmac, Jr.
PS. Serves you right for not writing your name in block letters instead of signing off with just your signature, BLOCKHEAD.
1.
Our luck,
stopped among
the carobs and pines.
Needles. The beckoning stone
hut sunk in whitewash, inside
the heart lines creasing
familiar land.
2.
Coming out
now, the close lie
of the gulffor a thousand miles
between us,the hard truth hurting,
absolute light.(First published in a somewhat different version in Sentences, 1976)
Ungrateful chattel,Munching on every minuteOf every day, lest you forgetThe hand that feeds you,Give thanksFor all that is given,All shall be sold,All carted away.
Lethe-bound, I had a dream In which all I remembered Remained a three-word puzzle:Short, mysterious, sweet.
Let it be decreed and duly inscribed:The word of a poet’s passing Shall be accompaniedBy a pealing pandemic Multitude of reads!

Sunday morning after church, 40 years ago: My mother's brother's coffeehouse in my home village of Remmatia--one refrigerator, one sink, one tiny butane cooker for the preparation of Greek coffee, three small round metal tables, a few wooden chairs, a hard-packed dirt floor, and the village's only telephone.
From left to right: My first cousin on my father's side of the family, my father, the village priest, my uncle, my cousin John on my mother's side--the only person still alive--all captured in a room inundated with incredible, bright late morning light.
Comforting
To know poets are
As good as their word—
It’s their politics
That’s disturbing.