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Summer/Fall 2001Volume II Issue III

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portal to our archives

from the editors

News & Notes

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Dick Davis was born in Portsmouth, England, in 1945, and educated at the universities of Cambridge (B.A. and M.A. in English Literature) and Manchester (PhD. in Medieval Persian Literature). He has taught at the universities of Tehran (Iran), Durham (U.K.), Newcastle (U.K.), and California (Santa Barbara) and is currently Professor of Persian at Ohio State University. He lived for 8 years in Iran, as well as for periods in Greece and Italy. As author, translator or editor, he has produced 18 books; as well as academic works he has published translations from Italian (prose) and Persian (prose and verse) and numerous volumes of his own poetry, including A New Kind of Love, Devices and Desires, Covenant and Touchwood

He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

 

 

In the Restaurant

Dick Davis

 

A Queen in exile, she presides at table,

Her weather-eye on rowdy merriment;

Her rule seems easy, even negligent,

But all the family knows her glance is able

To quell or swell the boisterous friendly Babel

That swirls about her, tamed and turbulent:

A Cybele you'd say, embodiment

Of all that's customary, tribal, stable.

 

Who, seeing this plump matriarch, could guess

That thirty years ago she'd risked her life

To cross Beirut's bomb-cratered no man's land,

Defying anguished parents, to say "Yes"

And be an unbeliever's outcast wife,

Careless of who'd condemn or understand?

 

 

 

© 2001 by Dick Davis

Also by Dick Davis:

Desire