On Poetry
THEME/S
Poet and essayist in modem Greek. Translated poems of the English poet, George Eliot, into modern Greek; was in diplomatic service, now retired and settled in Athens. Awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 1963. An Elder, maître, now in the literary world of modem Greece.
References: "Poetry" (Chicago); Greek Number, June 1951; "Poetry", Greek Number, October 1964; '"Poems" translated by Rex Warner (the Bodley Head. London)
Seferis is a poet of sighs. I do not know the cadence, the breath of the original Greek rhythm. But if something of that tone and temper has been carried over into English, what can be more like a heave of sign than—
"Bend if you can to the dark sea forgetting The flute's sound on naked feet That trod upon sleep in the other, the sunk life."
"Bend if you can to the dark sea forgetting
The flute's sound on naked feet
That trod upon sleep in the other, the sunk life."
It is the Virgilian "tears of things"—Lacrymaererum— the same that moved the muse of the ancient Roman poet, moves the modern Greek poet.
Seferis' poetry sobs—explicit or muffled—muttering or murmuring like a refrain—a mantra:
'Oh the pity of it all!'
What else is it, I repeat, but sobbing:
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I look for my old house, The house with the torn windows Darkened by the ivy, And for that ancient column The landmark of the sailor. How can I get into this hutch?
I look for my old house,
The house with the torn windows
Darkened by the ivy,
And for that ancient column
The landmark of the sailor.
How can I get into this hutch?
We are reminded of Jeanne d'Arc, the little maid who melted with great pity (grande pitié) at the sight of the misery stalking all around, ravaging her sweet France like a pest and which drove her in the end to a more than classical tragic end: Seferis too in the same manner wails
"Great pain had fallen on Greece."
Great pain, ruin everywhere...Greece is but a sign, a symbol of the whole earth, the whole humanity. All around ancient—sempiternal—ruins...
"Walls, streets and houses stood out Fossilised muscles of Cyclopian giants, Spent power in its anatomy..."
"Walls, streets and houses stood out
Fossilised muscles of Cyclopian giants,
Spent power in its anatomy..."
As if these were not sufficient, we must add new ones, fresh and bleeding—and not only material but moral ruins also—the dreadful results of our inhuman cruelties of war:
"When you look around and you find All about you swathes of feet
"When you look around and you find
All about you swathes of feet
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All about you dead hands All about you darkened eyes; When there is no longer any choice Of the death you wanted as your own, Listening to a great cry, Even to a wolf that yells..."
All about you dead hands
All about you darkened eyes;
When there is no longer any choice
Of the death you wanted as your own,
Listening to a great cry,
Even to a wolf that yells..."
Indeed a great cry shoots out of your heart; an indescribable pity, the upsurge of a divine Pieta, seizes upon your being and you are another person, you become a poet, a prophet, a God's warrior. Seferis too became in this way a poet and something of a prophet.
His poetry fulfils perfectly the function of the tragic drama, in the Aristotelian way—purification by evoking terror and pity—evoking terror, for example in these lines:
On our left the south-wind blows and drives us mad, The wind that bares bones, stripipng off the flesh,...
On our left the south-wind blows and drives us mad,
The wind that bares bones, stripipng off the flesh,...
Or the whole story of diabolical cruelty, the three Mules, with these tremendous lines:
...those jolting breasts Ripe as pomegranates with murder...1 (P.108)
...those jolting breasts
Ripe as pomegranates with murder...1 (P.108)
1 I quote here the whole passage in a little different translation:
The glorious animal of Queen Eleanor. Against her belly those eperons of gold, On her saddle those insatiable loins, In her amble tottering those breasts. Bursting like pomegranates with murder. (Contd. on P. 50)
The glorious animal of Queen Eleanor.
Against her belly those eperons of gold,
On her saddle those insatiable loins,
In her amble tottering those breasts.
Bursting like pomegranates with murder.
(Contd. on P. 50)
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This is terror, in excelsis. As for pity—his lines on Greece:
Great pain had fallen on Greece So many bodies thrown To jaws of the sea, to jaws of the earth, So many souls Given up to millstones to be crushed like com. And the muddy beds of the rivers sweated with blood. (Pp.115-116)
Great pain had fallen on Greece
So many bodies thrown
To jaws of the sea, to jaws of the earth,
So many souls
Given up to millstones to be crushed like com.
And the muddy beds of the rivers sweated with blood.
(Pp.115-116)
or
O Nightingale, Nightingale, What is God? What is not God? What is in between?
O Nightingale, Nightingale,
What is God? What is not God? What is in between?
Or this truly pitiful invocation:
But they have eyes all white without eyelashes And their arms are thin as reeds. Lord, not with these. I have known The voice of children at dawn Running on green hill-sides And when Neapolitans, Genoese and Lombards Brought to the royal table on a silver tray The shirt all bloody of the murdered king And made away with his pitiable brother I can imagine how she neighed that night,— Something beyond the impassivity of her race— Like the howling of a dog.
But they have eyes all white without eyelashes
And their arms are thin as reeds.
Lord, not with these. I have known
The voice of children at dawn
Running on green hill-sides
And when Neapolitans, Genoese and Lombards Brought to the royal table on a silver tray The shirt all bloody of the murdered king And made away with his pitiable brother I can imagine how she neighed that night,— Something beyond the impassivity of her race— Like the howling of a dog.
And when Neapolitans, Genoese and Lombards
Brought to the royal table on a silver tray
The shirt all bloody of the murdered king
And made away with his pitiable brother
I can imagine how she neighed that night,—
Something beyond the impassivity of her race—
Like the howling of a dog.
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Happily coloured, like the bees And like the butterflies. Lord, not with these, their voice Cannot even leave their mouths, It stays there glued on yellow teeth. (P.78)
Happily coloured, like the bees
And like the butterflies.
Lord, not with these, their voice
Cannot even leave their mouths,
It stays there glued on yellow teeth.
(P.78)
But as I have said terror and pity are invoked not for themselves but for the sake of purification. They serve to wash and cleanse the troubled sentiments and bring in a purer clearer atmosphere. When we have passed through those heavy and cruel feelings, we arrive at a kindlier note. Thus,
Then I heard footsteps upon the pebbles; I saw no faces. They had gone when I turned my head. Still that voice heavy upon me like the treading of cattle Stayed in the pulses of the sky and the seas rolled Over upon the shingle again and again. (P.110)
Then I heard footsteps upon the pebbles;
I saw no faces. They had gone when I turned my head.
Still that voice heavy upon me like the treading of cattle
Stayed in the pulses of the sky and the seas rolled
Over upon the shingle again and again.
(P.110)
Or this superb picture of the Holy Ascension:
Suddenly I was walking and not walking. I looked at the flying birds; they had turned to stone. I looked at the shining sky; there was amazement in the air. I looked at the struggling bodies; they stood still. And in their midst was a face ascending into the Light. Over the neck the black hair flowed, the eyebrows Had the beat of a swallow's wing, the nostrils Curved back over the lips, and now the body
Suddenly I was walking and not walking.
I looked at the flying birds; they had turned to stone.
I looked at the shining sky; there was amazement in the air.
I looked at the struggling bodies; they stood still.
And in their midst was a face ascending into the Light.
Over the neck the black hair flowed, the eyebrows
Had the beat of a swallow's wing, the nostrils
Curved back over the lips, and now the body
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Was rising out of the labour, naked, with the unripe breasts
Of a virgin, Leader of Ways;
A dancing but no movement. (Pp.120-121)
Indeed, this is beauty cleansed and translucent, a beauty of the eternal Ionian sky. How limpid and serene, yet pulsating with a coursing life is this pastoral:
In the sky the clouds were ringlets; here and there A trumpet of gold and rose: the approaching dusk. In the scanty grass and among the thorns there roamed Thin breaths that follow the rain; it must have been raining Over there at the edge of the hills that now took on colour. (P. 120)
In the sky the clouds were ringlets; here and there
A trumpet of gold and rose: the approaching dusk.
In the scanty grass and among the thorns there roamed
Thin breaths that follow the rain; it must have been raining
Over there at the edge of the hills that now took on colour. (P. 120)
Yet was he a Christian in mood or feeling or faith in the wake of his friend and comrade, kindred in spirit and in manner, the English poet T. S. Eliot ? There was a difference between the two and Seferis himself gave expression to it. The English poet after all was an escapist: he escaped, that is to say, in his consciousness, into the monastery, the religious or spiritual sedative—opium? Seferis speaks approvingly of a poet of his country, alike in spirit, who declared that he was no reformer in this sad world,1 he let things happen, he was satisfied with being a
1 This is what exactly Seferis says about this "old man" of Greece. "He has no inclination to reform. On the contrary, he has an
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witness, seeing nature unroll her inexhaustible beauty. Eliot's was more or less a moral revulsion whereas the Greek poet was moved rather by an aesthetic repulsion from the uglinesses of life. It was almost a physical reaction.
This reaction led him not to escape the reality but to detach himself and rise to heights from where he could see a clearer beauty in earthly things. He says:
Just a little more And we shall see the almond trees in blossom The marbles shining in the sun The sea, the curling waves. Just a little more Let us rise just a little higher.
Just a little more
And we shall see the almond trees in blossom
The marbles shining in the sun
The sea, the curling waves.
Let us rise just a little higher.
Nor was he, we may now observe, a pagan, a secular aesthete. He has himself risen enough to glimpse and name his soul. It was not perhaps as clear a sight as that of Eliot that had a touch of the Upanishadic assurance. Still the sense of an immortal thing unrepressed by mortalities came to him, in an authentic manner. For such is his final vision:
And those bodies Created from a land unknown to them Have their own souls.
And those bodies
Created from a land unknown to them
Have their own souls.
obvious loathing for any reformer. He writes as though he were telling us: if men are such as they are, let them go where they deserve to be. It is not my business to correct them."
—Poetry (Chicago), Oct., 1964.
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Now they assemble tools to change these souls. It will not be possible. They will only undo them. If souls can be undone. (P. III)
Now they assemble tools to change these souls.
It will not be possible. They will only undo them.
If souls can be undone.
(P. III)
Neither wholly an earthbound poet nor clearly an otherworldly prophet his question still remains:
Seferis is a being of this in-between world, his consciousness a golden seam joining two hemispheres.
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