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C. P. Cavafy

C. P. Cavafy (1863-1933) was born in Alexandria, Egypt, and grew up in Liverpool, England and Constantinople (now Istanbul). Considered one of the most accomplished Greek poets of the twentieth century, he published little work during his lifetime and prefered to circulate poems among close friends. However, he had a long friendship with British novelist E. M. Forester, who was impressed with Cavafy’s poems set during antiquity and wrote an essay called “The Poetry of C. P. Cavafy” that praised him for bucking traditional representations of ancient Greece. Cavafy’s work was also starkly personal, and many of his poems dealt explicitly with sex and homosexuality. His best-known poems, “Ithaca” and “Waiting for the Barbarians,” inspired generations of modern Greek poets who came after him, including Nobel laureate George Seferis.

Author

Meaning

Winter 2004 | Poetry

The years of my youth, my sensual life—
how clearly I see their meaning now.