The Complete Poems of C.P. Cavafy. Daniel Mendelsohn

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The Complete Poems of C.P. Cavafy - Daniel  Mendelsohn

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      [1913; 1916]

       The Seleucid’s Displeasure

      The Seleucid Demetrius was displeased

      to learn that a Ptolemy had arrived

      in Italy in such a sorry state.

      With only three or four slaves;

      dressed like a pauper, and on foot. This is why

      their name would soon be bandied as a joke,

      an object of fun in Rome. That they have, at bottom,

      become the servants of the Romans, in a way,

      the Seleucid knows; and that those people give

      and take away their thrones

      arbitrarily, however they like, he knows.

      But nonetheless at least in their appearance

      they should maintain a certain magnificence;

      shouldn’t forget that they are still kings,

      that they are still (alas!) called kings.

      This is why Demetrius the Seleucid was annoyed,

      and straightaway he offered Ptolemy

      robes all of purple, a gleaming diadem,

      exceedingly costly jewels, and numerous

      servants and a retinue, his most expensive mounts,

      that he should appear in Rome as was befitting,

      like an Alexandrian Greek monarch.

      But the Lagid, who had come a mendicant,

      knew his business and refused it all;

      he ­didn’t need these luxuries at all.

      Dressed in worn old clothes, he humbly entered Rome,

      and found lodgings with a minor craftsman.

      And then he presented himself to the Senate

      as an ill-fortuned and impoverished man,

      that with greater success he might beg.

      [1910; 1916]

       Orophernes

      He, who on the four-drachma piece

      seems to have a smile on his face,

      on his beautiful, refined face,

      he is Orophernes, son of Ariarathes.

      A child, they chased him out of Cappadocia,

      from the great ancestral palace,

      and sent him away to grow up

      in Ionia, to be forgotten among foreigners.

      Ah, the exquisite nights of Ionia

      when fearlessly, and completely as a Greek,

      he came to know pleasure utterly.

      In his heart, an Asiatic still:

      but in his manners and in his speech a Greek,

      bedecked with turquoise, yet Greek-attired,

      his body scented with perfume of jasmine;

      and of Ionia’s beautiful young men

      the most beautiful was he, the most ideal.

      Later on, when the Syrians came

      to Cappadocia, and had made him king,

      he threw himself completely into his reign,

      that he might enjoy some novel pleasure each new day,

      that he might horde the gold and silver, avaricious,

      that over all of this he might exult, and gloat

      to see the heaped-up riches glittering.

      As for cares of state, administration—

      he ­didn’t know what was going on around him.

      The Cappadocians quickly threw him out.

      And so to Syria he fled, to the palace of

      Demetrius, to entertain himself and loll about.

      Still, one day some unaccustomed thoughts

      broke in on his total idleness:

      he remembered that through his mother, Antiochis,

      and through that ancient lady, Stratonice,

      he too descended from the Syrian crown,

      he too was very nearly a Seleucid.

      For a while he emerged from his lechery and drink,

      and ineptly, in a kind of daze,

      cast around for something he might plot,

      something he might do, something to plan,

      and failed miserably and came to nothing.

      His death must have been recorded somewhere and then lost.

      Or maybe history passed it by,

      and very rightly ­didn’t deign

      to notice such a trivial thing.

      He, who on the four-drachma piece

      left the charm of his lovely youth,

      a glimmer of his poetic beauty,

      a sensitive memento of an Ionian boy,

      he is Orophernes, son of Ariarathes.

      [1904; 1916]

       Alexandrian Kings

      The Alexandrians came out in droves

      to have a look at Cleopatra’s children:

      Caesarion,

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