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Cavafy is probably best known for his 1911 poem "Ithaka." In it he presents us all as on the same trip as Odyssesus, trying, through adventures to make it back to our own Ithaka. However, Cavafy directs us to see that it is the adventures, and not the home at the end, that represent the riches we are being offered. When setting out upon your way to Ithaca,wish always that your course be long, full of adventure, full of knowledge. ... then pray that the road is long. That summer mornings are many, that you will enter ports seen for the first time with such pleasure, with such joy! .... Better that it should last for many years, and that, now old, you moor at Ithaca at last, a man enriched by all you gained upon the way, and not expecting Ithaca to give you further wealth. For Ithaca has given you the beautiful voyage. ... With the great wisdom you have gained, with so much experience, you must surely have understood by then what Ithacas mean.
Cavafy used various meters carefully, something that cannot be translated. He also played with the double nature of the Greek at his time, using both demotic and purist Greek, also more or less untranslatable. Here are excerpts from some of his work I find moving.
An Old Man And in the scorn of his miserable old
age, Thermopylae Honor to those who in their lives are committed and guard their Thermopylae. Never stirring from duty; just and upright in all their deeds, but with pity and compassion too; ... And they merit greater honor when they foresee (and many do foresee) that Ephialtes will finally appear, and in the end the Medes will go through. Waiting
for the Barbarians (Cavafy describes
how all of polite society has organized themselves to await and impress
the barbarians, but, the barbarians don't appear.) |
| Last modified 10/21/06; posted 1/14/2000. © 2006 John P. Nordin |