“The Rest I Will Tell to Those Down to Hades”

“Indeed,” said the proconsul, closing the book, “this line is beautiful and very true. Sophocles wrote it in a deeply philosophic mood. How much we’ll tell down there, how much, and how very different we’ll appear. What we protect here like sleepless guards, wounds and secrets locked inside us, protect with such great anxiety day after day, we’ll disclose freely and clearly down there.” “You might add,” said the sophist, half smiling, “if they talk about things like that down there, if they bother about them any more.”
Reprinted from C. P. CAVAFY: Collected Poems Revised Edition, translated by Edmund Keeley and Philip Sherrard, edited by George Savvidis. Translation copyright © 1975, 1992 by Edmund Keeley and Philip Sherrard. Princeton University Press. For reuse of these translations, please contact Princeton University Press.
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«Nous n’osons plus chanter les Roses»

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