Cavafy, Constantine - Nasos Vayenas (essay date 1979)
Nasos Vayenas (essay date 1979)
SOURCE: “The Language of Irony (Towards a Definition of the Poetry of Cavafy),” in Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, Vol. 5, 1979, pp. 43-56.
[In the essay which follows, Vayenas attempts to settle the debate over whether Cavafy's poetry is lyric or dramatic by emphasizing the importance of verbal and situational irony in his works.]
The first time André Gide heard the name of Cavafy was during his visit to Greece, in April 1939. He was talking to Dimaras, Theotokas and Seferis when the conversation turned to the poet of Alexandria. Gide asked what kind of poetry Cavafy wrote. ‘Lyrique’, Dimaras replied. ‘Didactique’, corrected Seferis. Later on Dimaras read ‘The City’ to the group. After the end of the reading Gide turned to Seferis and said: ‘Je comprends maintenant ce que vous vouliez dire par le mot didactique …’1
Seferis was to change his definition very soon....
[The entire page is 5284 words long]
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- E. M. Forster (essay date 1923)
- Petroula Kephala Ruehlen (essay date 1965)
- George Seferis (essay date 1966)
- C. M. Bowra (essay date 1967)
- Edmund Keeley and George Savidis (essay date 1971)
- D. N. Maronitis (essay date 1972)
- Kimon Friar (essay date 1973)
- Robert Liddell (essay date 1974)
- Nasos Vayenas (essay date 1979)
- Valeria A. Caires (essay date 1980)
- C. Capri-Karka (essay date 1982)
- Roderick Beaton (essay date 1983)
- Gregory Jusdanis (essay date 1985)
- Margaret Alexiou (essay date 1985)
- Publishers Weekly (essay date 2001)
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