  Cavafy's work has many different threads. One can be found in
Cavafy's posthumously published poem, "The Enemies." There Cavafy
speaks of poets "who so much transformed past things." In a
remarkable commentary on the shaping of taste, fashion, ideas, and
literary canons, Cavafy seems to have foreseen the power of future
readers to re-evaluate his work, even as Cavafy reshaped what he
inherited from his precursors. Cavafy was a modern Plutarch, who
read not just lives but historical moments past, present, and
future in parallel. He understood that hindsight sees clearly
history's unforeseen ironic turns, but the same eyes are blind to
history's repetitions. He set his art to dramatizing the emotions,
desires, and reflections, however grand or mundane, that propel
people to act unwisely, then to console themselves by reliving the
past as they would have liked to play it out.
Cavafy's sources of inspiration were human dramas that had
"aged." It was the effects of time's passage as much as the drama
of actual events that interested him. "To me, the immediate
impression is never a starting point for work. The impression has
got to age, has got to falsify itself with time, without my having
to falsify it," Cavafy wrote. He found evidence of "aged" and
"falsified" human drama all around him in Alexandria, Egypt, a city
that had risen to power and declined more than once in its long
history.
Cavafy's sources of "aged" impressions also contain memories
from his lifetime. Cavafy's was an immensely rich family of the
Greek diaspora with allegedly aristocratic, Byzantine roots. His
family's precipitous fall from to near poverty, vacillations in the
financial fortunes of the once thriving modern Greek colony in
Alexandria, and breaks in relations between Muslim and Christian,
colonial and colonized populations in Egypt are the contemporary
events that shaped the modern end of Cavafy's historical sense.
Cavafy's archives-his passport, photographs, family genealogy,
letters and, most dramatically, Cavafy's death mak-bring this life
into view. One can follow the dramatic change from the Cavafy
family's presence in cosmopolitan upper class London and
Constantinopolitan societies to his life as an impoverished civil
servant in the British colony of Alexandria.
But Cavafy channeled energy from his family's "fall" into
reflections on time's passing. Cavafy's family story does not enter
his poetry directly. Instead it appears in his thinking about
transition, change, decline, and passage from one world order to
another. A book Cavafy read diligently is Edward Gibbons' Decline
and Fall of the Roman Empire, which Cavafy filled with fervent
notes of violent disagreement and occasional assent. Here Cavafy
reveals the development of his ideas about decline. In published
and unpublished manuscripts, too, one finds his highly
sophisticated dramatization of historical and imaginary personae
facing sudden and disastrous change in various states of
preparedness. Cavafy's small world of personal disappointments
expands to incorporate a long view of historical upheavals in the
Eastern Mediterranean.
The "aged" impressions that entered Cavafy's work most directly
and famously come from his nightly escapades. Most Cavafy readers
today know that he secretly fled the decency, order, and
claustrophobia of life in Alexandria's "good quarter" to enjoy the
mess, squalor, and excitement of homosexual encounters in the shops
and bars of Alexandria's "bad quarter." Cavafy was careful to keep
these and other secrets half-hidden. He did not publish some of his
best poems-especially his explicitly homosexual poems-in his
lifetime. Partly this was to hide his homosexuality, the "Hidden
Things" he referred to in one of many poems he left unpublished and
filed with this note: "to be kept but not published." At every turn
one sees Cavafy plotting his future by alternately revealing and
hiding himself. One suggestive note reads: "This evening it went
through my mind to write about my love. And yet I won't do it. Such
power has prejudice. I have been freed from it, but I think of
those enslaved under whose eyes this paper may pass. And I stop.
What pusillanimity! Let me note one letter-T-as symbol of the
moment. 9.ll.1902."
In large part, Cavafy's strategy of saving instead of publishing
guaranteed surprise, a necessary element of sustained fame. Cavafy
understood that a poet's death would transform his name. He wanted
to ensure an affirming transformation. In his lifetime he
circulated his work only partially, never as a whole. He sent
readers hand-sewn printed copies of his poems to friends,
acquaintances, and preferred readers. He handpicked his readers-and
the list changed with each new mailing, depending on his previous
reception. Cavafy's archives reveal quite deliberately and
systematically this strategy. To date, only Greek-speaking
audiences have had access to this astounding resource.
Cavafy left his complete works to posterity to discover, bit by
bit. The story of his reception is another important part of his
legacy It is found in letters, in the sequence of publications and
translations of his work but also in paintings that visualize
memories of fleeting encounters recorded in Cavafy's poetry. The
most famous of these is a set of David Hockney drawings, but there
are many other excellent portraits of the poet by lesser known
artists.
People's responses to his poetry keep his work alive.
"...What these Ithakas mean." Readings in Cavafy,
in Greek and English, presents Cavafy's life and poetry as well as
responses by current readers to 45 of his poems. Edited by
Artemis Leontis, Lauren Talalay, and Keith Taylor, the volume is
lavishly illustrated with documentary photographs relating to
Cavafy's life and images of objects from the Kelsey Museum
collection that resonate with his poems. 148 pages; hard
cover: $35.00; soft cover: $20.00.
Order using the Kelsey Museum
book order form.
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