Thursday, December 30, 2010
"Who reads that stuff?"
One night when the beautiful light of the moon
poured into my room ... imagination, taking
something from life: some very scanty thing -
a distant scene, a distant pleasure -
brought a vision all its own of flesh,
a vision all its own to a sensual bed.
It's hard on the Classics scholars, because they are, after all, immersed in a world whose schoolmarm was Plato. This means, for them, when they encounter a passage of awkwardness of translation, its text will not have been policed by hypocrites. It takes a very good school, and very well run at that, to furnish a climate of trust - the body and blood of learning, in any event - where a boy or girl can wander down the hall and ask an honest question. This poem, written in the katharevousa, poses that challenge.
The catastrophe is self-evident where the boy may not inquire, in that setting of zombie piety that will be left of a culture gone not merely mad with denial, but stupid by choice. Parents who know better have been willing to raise dumb children - did I say that, clearly enough? - in a society where speculation is more urgent than conservation. Look at the debris of Brooke Astor's portfolio, if you doubt it.
I write from a polity horsewhipt into innumerable wars and horrendous fiscal follies, on the strength of arguments a 9th grade Classics student would denounce as Sophistry. It's what the whole, bitterly comic interview with the priests was about, in Henry V's deliberately unjust war - the scene Olivier's revolting revamp had to cut. Day after day after day, we still endure that masterpiece of passive-aggressive denial, the Manichaean heresy - the binomial false alternative - by crescendoes from our public rostrums and from Mr Murdoch's media.
Who cares?
Who knows?
There is our ballot box.
It follows: the study of the Classics is an indispensable channel for caring about one's country.
First, let's see the boy.
That's a start.
Now, let's try saying this: I honestly don't intend for this boy to be stupid.
You understand the risk, of course. We won't elect a Governor of Virginia who tells us the misogynistic, homophobic thesis he wrote to get a degree at a seaside sectarian hate-tank is something he never meant to say.
Constantine Cavafy
Birth of a Poem, 1922
Daniel Mendelsohn, translation
C.P. Cavafy: The Unfinished Poems,
The First English Translation
Knopf, 2009©
Daniel Mendelsohn
Commencement Address, 2009
Tassos Paschalis
Moments to remember
Image suite, 30 Dec 10
The Washington Post
29 Aug 09
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I don't understand but i really like this post. <3
ReplyDeleteI'd rather be in your shoes :) Thank you for visiting.
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