Where sunset copperplates the sea With flecks of gold and Verdigris And down below, the ghosts of ships do battle in the bay Where in the morning, rising scents of sea salt and of sage Drift up the hill on gifted wings to greet the kids that come of age On dry stone walls in olive groves Beneath the strident sun
Sharp shadows cast by old scrub oaks Where once young shepherds flung their cloaks Resist the timeless tug of war of brash Etesian winds Where goats' bells bounce off whitewashed walls, with each staccato leap And black-wrapped widows spin their webs to catch what precious dream-filled sleep They might ‘neath watch of leaning, still Centurions of stone
To soothe the white heat of the sun We dived and left our limbs undone In ocean coolness, born again - and flushed, we struck for shore With towels held high above our heads we tiptoed onto land And broke from canvas rare delights to share upon the sand The day we lunched on Ithaca Two thousand orbits turned
Content, we hung in listless sleep As painted ladies traced our shape Until the lure of barefoot expeditions brought me round I picked my steps with casual ease through shade of salt-dried driftwood trees And swore I’d found the very glade where hung the Golden Fleece I turned to share my thrill with you But chose instead to spare your peace
Soon after came the faithful sound Of bells that haul the Earth around Each chime remarking loud and clear its moment’s fading grace And deep within you as you slept, inaudible at first, The beating of a second drum began to be rehearsed The day we lunched on Ithaca Life’s liquor quenched our thirst