archerâs turret? The gate opens and the boys hurry past, scowling at her as they skirt puddles. Not long after, the old teacher comes out leaning on a stick and she blocks his path.
âYour song. Was it inside those pages?â
The tutor can hardly turn his head; it is as though a gourd has been implanted beneath his chin.
âWill you teach me? I know some signs already; I know the one thatâs like two pillars with a rod between, and the one thatâs like a gallows, and the one thatâs like an ox head upside down.â
With an index finger in the mud at his feet she draws an A . The man raises his gaze to the rain. Where his eyeballs should be white, they are yellow.
âGirls donât go to tutors. And you donât have any money.â
She lifts a jug from the cart. âI have wine.â
He comes alert. One arm reaches for the jug.
âFirst,â she says, âa lesson.â
âYouâll never learn it.â
She does not budge. The old teacher groans. With the end of his stick in the wet dirt he writes:
ὨκεανÏÏ
â Åkeanos , Ocean, eldest son of Sky and Earth.â He draws a circle around it and pokes its center. âHere the known.â Then he pokes the outside. âHere the unknown. Now the wine.â
She passes it to him and he drinks with both hands. She crouches on her heels. ὨκεανÏÏ . Seven marks in the mud. And yet they contain the lonely traveler and the brass-walled palace with its golden watchdogs and the goddess with her mist?
----
For returning late, Widow Theodora beats the sole of Annaâs left foot with the bastinado. For returning with one of the jugs half-empty, she beats the right. Ten strokes on each. Anna hardly cries. Half the night she inscribes letters across the surfaces of her mind, and all the following day, as she hobbles up and down the stairs, as she carries water, as she fetches eels for Chryse the cook, she sees the island kingdom of Alcinous, wreathed with clouds and blessed by the west wind, teeming with apples, pears, and olives, blue figs and red pomegranates, boys of gold on shining pedestals with burning torches in their hands.
Two weeks later she is coming back from the market, going out of her way to pass the rooming house, when she spies the goitrous tutor sitting in the sun like a potted plant. She sets down her basket of onions and with a finger in the dust writes,
ὨκεανÏÏ
Around it she draws a circle.
âEldest son of Sky and Earth. Here the known. Here the unknown.â
The man strains his head to one side and swivels his gaze to her, as though seeing her for the first time, and the wet in his eyes catches the light.
His name is Licinius. Before his misfortunes, he says, he served as tutor to a wealthy family in a city to the west, and he owned six books and an iron box to hold them: two lives of the saints, a book of orations by Horace, a testament of the miracles of Saint Elisabeth, a primer on Greek grammar, and Homerâs Odyssey . But then the Saracens captured his town, and he fled to the capital with nothing, and thank the angels in heaven for the city walls, whose foundation stones were laid by the Mother of God Herself.
From inside his coat Licinius produces three mottled bundles of parchment. Ulysses, he says, was once a general in the greatest army ever assembled, whose legions came from Hyrmine, from Dulichium, from the walled cities of Cnossos and Gortyn, from the farthest reaches of the sea, and they crossed the ocean in a thousand black ships to sack the fabled city of Troy, and from each ship spilleda thousand warriors, as innumerable, Licinius says, as the leaves in the trees, or as the flies that swarm over buckets of warm milk in shepherdsâ stalls. For ten years they sieged Troy, and after they finally took it, the weary legions sailed home, and all arrived safely except Ulysses. The entire song of his
R. C. Farrington, Jason Farrington