Ithaca (poem) explained

"Ithaca" (Greek, Modern (1453-);: Ιθάκη) is a 1911 poem by Greek poet Constantine P. Cavafy that is commonly considered his most popular work. It was first published in 1911 in the journal Grammata ("letters") of Alexandria. Based on the homeward journey of Odysseus in Homer's Odyssey, the poem is titled after its namesake island of Ithaca. It is classified as a didactic-philosophical poem, stressing the importance of the journey over the destination. An early version of the poem was written in 1894 titled "A Second Odyssey". Ithaca gained a global audience upon its 1994 reading at the funeral of former first lady of the United States Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.

Story

"Ithaca" loosely follows the journey of Odysseus in Homer's Odyssey. Cavafy wrote an early version of the poem in 1894, titled "A Second Odyssey". He revised the poem into its final state in October 1910.

"Ithaca" was published in November 1911. It was included as the ninth of forty poems in Cavafy's Poems 1905–1915. Cavafy had written a number of poems inspired by traditional works of ancient Greek literature in his early years as a poet, but by 1903 had largely shifted his focus to more obscure elements of Ancient Greek history, including far-flung outposts such as in Persia. Poems based on Homer's works were the only influenced by traditional classic Greek works that he included in his Poems 1905–1915. He based several poems on Homer's Iliad, but "Ithaca" is the only one he drew from the Odyssey.

The poem describes Odysseus's journey home after the end of the Trojan War. Cavafy describes Odysseus seeing amazing things, without clearly caring for the destination, as he is advised: "don't hurry your trip in any way". According to the poem, experiences gained along the way will prepare its subject for the final destination: "As wise as you will have become, with so much experience, / you will understand, by then, these Ithacas; what they mean."

Translations

The poem's title is also spelled as "Ithaka" in several translations, including that of Keeley and Sherrard in 1975.

Symbolism

Many of Cavafy's poems consist of various symbols used to as a teaching tool by the poet. They are usually lessons that either the poet himself has experienced or moments in our lives that the poet does not want us to regret and miss out on.

Mechanisms

Cavafy uses repetition for emphasis in this poem. He repeats the way in which he wishes the journey for Ithaca to be long and full of wonders.[3] He mentions his desire for a long journey at both the beginning of the poem and at the beginning of the second stanza.

Reception

"Ithaca" is Cavafy's best known poem. Scholar Daniel Mendelsohn attributes the poem's enduring popularity to its focus on the journey over the destination. He writes that the destination described in "Ithaca" is death, and emphasizing the activity of life without considering the end resonated in American popular culture. According to Mendelsohn, the poem's relatively sentimental theme, considered uncharacteristic of Cavafy's works, has resulted in some of his literary critics considering the poem to be overrated. Cavafy, despite being known for "purging" his poetry of "cheaply sentimental" works, chose to include the poem prominently in several of his poetry collections, including Poems 1905–1915. Mendelsohn analyzes the placement of the poem in that collection as signaling a shift in its mood from "pessimism to optimism, from death to life". He concludes that the poem functions as a "gateway" to Cavafy's broader work in the collection.

Kaprē-Karka describes "Ithaca" as the "brain" of Cavafy's opus.

Legacy

The poem was read by Maurice Tempelsman at Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis's funeral on May 23, 1994. In his reading, Tempelsman included two of his own verses. Scholar Peter Jeffreys describes this widely watched moment as presenting Cavafy's work to "a global audience that he could never have imagined". The reading inspired an increase in sales of Cavafy's poetry, making him a bestseller for a time that year.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Salzer . Jacques . 2017 . Sur un chemin incertain, guidant les personnes et guidé par elles, le médiateur leur offre le risque de s’entendre et s’accorder à travers lui. Mais tout le monde désire-t-il vraiment s’entendre et s’accorder? . Négociations . 28 . 2 . 159 . 10.3917/neg.028.0159 . 1780-9231. free .
  2. Pinchin . Jane Lagoudis . 2015-12-31 . Alexandria Still: Forster, Durrell, and Cavafy . 10.1515/9781400870714. De Gruyter.
  3. Χάρδας . Αναστάσιος . 2017-10-24 . Σωκράτης Κονιόρδος (επιμ.), Κοινωνικό Κεφάλαιο. Εμπιστοσύνη και Κοινωνία των Πολιτών, εκδόσεις Παπαζήση, Αθήνα 2010, 263 σελ. . Ελληνική Επιθεώρηση Πολιτικής Επιστήμης . 39 . 159 . 10.12681/hpsa.14553 . 2585-3031. free .