George Seferis (1900-1971) - original name Giorgios Stylianou Seferiades - birth date in some sources February 19, 1900, or March 13, 1900
Greek poet, essayist, and diplomat who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in
1963. Seferis is considered to be the most distinguished Greek poet of the pre-war
generation of the 1930s. In his work Seferis combined the language of everyday
speech with traditional poetic forms and rhythms. Seferis spent much of his
life outside Greece in diplomatic service. Recurrent theme in his poetry is
exile and nostalgia for the Mediterranean and his birthplace, Smyrna.
"Your music is this life
you wasted.
You could regain it if you wish,
if you fasten to this indifferent thing
which casts you back
there where you set out."
(from Summer Solstice, 1966)
George Seferis (Georgios Seferiades) was born in Izmir (formerly Smyrna),
Turkey. His father was a lawyer and his mother the daughter of a prosperous
landowner. Smyrna, an ancient city on the Aegean Sea, is one of the cities
claiming to be the birthplace of Homer. It became a major source of
inspiration for Seferis during his career as a poet. Seferis started to
compose poems at the age of 14. The family moved in 1914 to Athens, where he
graduated from the First Classical Gymnasium in 1917.
From 1918 Seferis was a reluctant student of law at the Sorbonne in Paris,
completing his doctoral requirements in 1924. During these years he continued
to write verse and familiarized himself with contemporary French poetry. When
Smyrna was retaken by the Turks in the early 1920s, Seferis felt he was in
exile and decided to enter the diplomatic service. He traveled to London to
perfect his English.
Upon graduating he obtained a post in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He
served in London as vice-consul, and as consul in Albania in the 1930s. In
London he discovered the poetry of T.S. Eliot, whose style greatly influenced
him. His first volume of poetry, STROFI (The Turning Point), appeared in 1931
in a private edition. In it Seferis rejected his previous dominating
rhetorical tone and used sophisticated rhymes and imagery. In The Turning
Point Seferis showed his deep acquaintance with symbolism, as in his second
collection, I STERNA (1932).
In the following collections Seferis left lyricism behind and assimilated what
he had learned from Cavafy, Eliot, and Ezra Pound. In MYTHISTORIMA (1935) he
achieved a style that influenced greatly the development of Greek verse, but
he also bridged a gap between traditional and modern expression. Seferis used
the vernacular, the language spoken by literate Greeks, and combined his own
experiences with history. Most of the characters were taken from Homer's
Odyssey. Mythistorima's twenty-four sections are narrated by travelers who are
at once present-day exiles and ancient, Homeric figures. "We were searching to
rediscover the first seed / so that the ancient drama could begin again." (from
Mythistorima, 1935)
In 1941 Seferis married Maria Zannou, whom he had met on vacation in 1936.
During WW II Seferis accompanied Greek government officials into exile, living
in Crete, Egypt, South Africa, and Italy. After the war he held diplomatic
posts in Lebanon (1953-57), Syria, Jordan, and Iraq, and served as the Greek
ambassador in London from 1957 to 1962. "Wherever I travel, Greece wounds me,"
he once said. Seferis's first publication in English, The King of Assine and
Other Poems, appeared in 1948. During the Cyprus crisis in the 1950s, he
contributed to the negotiations that resulted in the London Agreement (1959),
making Cyprus independent of British rule.
Seferis's years as a diplomat in several countries made him a modern Odysseus.
The theme of wandering was further developed in the persona of Stratis
Thalassinos in three collections, Logbooks, written in Albania, South Africa
and in Italy (1940-65). The last collection, Logbook 3, was dedicated to the
people of Cyprus. Seferis retired from governmental service in 1962 and
settled in Athens. In 1969 he declared his opposition to the Papadopoulos
dictatorship after the military coup of 1967, becoming popular with the
younger generation in Greece. Seferis also expressed his fears about the
triumph of commercial culture and once told of his dream in which the
Parthenon was auctioned off to become an advertisement, "every column a
gigantic tube of toothpaste." Seferis died on September 20, 1971. Thousands of
young people escorted his coffin, to honor him as a spokesman for freedom. His
widow cut off her hair and flung it into his grave. "I am fully conscious that
we do not live in a time when the poet can believe that fame awaits him, but
in a time of oblivion. This doesn't make me less dedicated to my beliefs, I am
more so."
For further reading: The Marble Threshing Floor by P. Sherrard (1956); Modern
Greek Poetry by K. Friar (1973); Love and the Symbolic Journey in the Poetry
of Cavafy, Eliot and Seferis by C. Capri-Karka (1982); My Brother George
Seferis by J. Tsatsos (1982), Form,Cycle, Infinity: Landscape Imagery in the
Poetry of Robert Frost and George Seferis by Rachel Hadas (1985); War in the
Poetry of George Seferis by K. Kapre-Karka (1986); George Seferis by R. Beaton
(1991) - Note: Seferis translated T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land into Greek and
introduced also Ezra Pound to his countrymen. As Odysseus Elytis (Nobel Prize
in 1970) he published poems in the 1930s in the literary review Ta Nea
Grammata. - Suom.: Suomeksi Seferikselta on käännety runoja antologiaan Niin
vaihtuvat vuodenajat.
Selected works:
* I STROFÍ, 1931 - The Turning Point
* I STÉRNA, 1932 - The Cistern
* MITHISTÓRIMA, 1935 - Mythical Story
* GHYMNOPEDHIA, 1935 - transl.
* IMEROLÓYION KATASTRÓMATOS I, 1940 - Logbook
* TETRÁDHIO YIMNASMÁTON, 1940 - Exercise Book
* DHOKIMES, 1944 (expanded ed., 1962) - partial tr. On the Greek Style, 1966
* IMEROLÓYION KATASTRÓMATOS II, 1945 - Logbook II
* Six Poems from the Greek of Sikelianos and Seferis, 1946
* KÍKHLI, 1947 - Thrush
* The King of Asine and Other Poems, 1948
* POIÍMATA 1924-46, 1950
* IMEROLÓYION KATASTRÓMATOS III, 1955 - Logbook III
* Poems, 1960
* Six Poets of Modern Greece, 1961 (ed. by Edmund Keeley and Philip Sherrard)
* Delphi, 1963
* TRIA KRYFA PIIMATA, 1966 - Three Selected Poems
* George Seferis: Collected Poems 1924-1955, 1967 (bilingual, trans. by Edmund
Keeley and Philip Sherrard)
* A Poet's Journal: Days of 1945-1951, 1974
* Collected Poems 1924-1970, 1975 (bilingual)
* Complete Poems of George Seferis, 1989
* George Seferis: Collected Poems, 1995
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