At lb 4 At 4 Seferis: myth, miracle, Continued from page four reading of the poems - was the poet's omission of the last words of Anticleia to her son: "Note all things strange seen here, to tell your lady in after days." Seferis was convicted. He was a woman- hater, and thus he was not Homeric, was not Greek. However having re-read his poems two or three times I can presently only ac- cuse the editors of denying the wisdom of Seferis' pen changing shape, "grow- ing/larger and smaller,/ we too chang- ing, as we gazed, the shape of our de- sire and,/ our hearts." Seferis, just as El Greco, had good reason for putting the hospital of Don Juan Tavera into his picture "View and Plan of Toledo" in the shape of a model. Indeed Seferis' omission is significant, but not in the way I first suspected. The poet in his life and in his poetry is more concerned with Achilles' pronouncements on the after-life, than with Agamemnon's assurances of Penelope's fidelity. For unless Odysseus re-evaluates the real- ities of two other bed-fellows, Time and Love, unless he turns his desires to the light, he would return home to be made a cuckold by Time at some later date. Seferis' poems from Turning . Point (1931) to Logbook 111 (1955) describe his attempts to turn his desires to the light; he becomes increasingly aware that, as Eliot put it, "Time present and time past/are both perhaps present in time future/and time future contained Mysticism in time past." Unlike Eliot, the miracle of rebirth is "no where but circulating in the veins of man," (253) "light is mir- rored in (the) blood." (331) Love, for Se- feris, is neither the transient, though joyful, moments of the marital bed, nor the benign eternity of the traditional Christian God. Love "...belongs to the Furies/ as it belongs to man and to stone and to water and to grass/and to the animal that look straight into the eyes of its approaching death."(359) Yet the intensity - and the attrac- tion - of Seferis' poetry does not de- rive from the purity of his mythic vision. It is the tension between his individual and mythic consciousnesses which gives his poetry its fire and its light. In "Ero- tikos Logos" (1932) Seferis realizes that "the beauties nature grants us are born/ but who knows if a soul hasn't died in the world." (431) It is this Fury, this tragic paradox, that follows Seferis, taunting him with the memories of the past, both his own and that of the Greek people. He never stops waiting "for the mir- acle that opens the heavens and makes all things possible." Even after he has "touched the depths under memory," and he felt in his veins "a sound of sac- rifice," he never completely surrenders the dream of a resurrection. Seferis in- sists, but never completely believes that ". . . there's no other way you've got to become like stone if/you want (the an- gels') company/and when you look for the miracle you've got to scatter your/ blood to the eight points of the wind." (253) Even in "The King of Asine," perhaps his best poem, he is not rescued from the haunting paradox of his vision by his discovery of the living presence of the heroic Greek past and his own per- sonal past in the silent voice of nature and in his own veins. "Sometimes touch- ing with our fingers (the King's) touch upon/the stones," we are the forgotten king. But by casting off the "gold burial mask," the one reference to the King of Asine in Homer, Seferis seemingly dis- misses the poet, the word, and the poem, as hollow, as a void. Yet the poet's feel- ings about poetry, just like his feelings about women, seem to be very ambiva- lent. He again is divided by a conscious- ness which is both mythic and indi- vidualistic. Indeed, temporal love and the indivi- dual poet's aspirations and accomplish- ments are viewed somewhat alike in Seferis' poetry. In "Memory 1" (1955) the poet tells how "I thought of playing a tune and then I was ashamed of the/ and other world/the one that watches me from beyond the night from within my light." He is still the poet of the post-Renais- sance period, still the individual separ- ate self: "Memory hurts wherever you touch it." Men suffer and have suffered because they chase the delusions of the gods, "...the thirst for blood/roused by/the body's sperm as by salt." Wo- man is not simply the sterile creature of Eliot's poetry. Like man, she is sub- jected to the furies of the flesh. In the poem "Strates Thalassinos Among the Agapanthi" Seferis creates a parable about the course of his jour- ney as a man and thus as a poet. "The first thing God made is the long jour- ney; that house there is waiting/with the blue smoke/with its aged dog/ waiting for the homecoming so that if can die." Seferis has not reached the end of the journey, his house is not dead. As he noticed in the poem, "Thrush," "houses you know, grow stubborn when you strip them bare." Thus Penelope, man's partner in his house of individual consciousness, has not been dismissed from Seferis' translation of Anticleia's last words to Odysseus. She is there in the form of the poem, in Odysseus, in the light, in the ambivalence that Sefer- is has yet to embrace before it can die. Mr. Madigan is a Ph.D. candidate in American Culture at the University of Michigan. Vol. 5 No. 2 Life with Father in Mother I 11 r SuggstdOutside .Readin Autobiographyd$6.95' from Journey into the Whirlwind, by E. " a Criticism Esyb Ezra pound; $10'. Pound/Joyce Letters and Essays, by $r The Novel Now, by Anthony Burgess; $5. Current Affairs'byNor Present Tens: An American Editor's odyssey, by Present Tense:7 95 man Cousins; $7.95. Education: Maria Montessori; $6.95 The Uni est of ChicgoThe Absorbent Mifld, by araMnesi;$.5 The University of Cicago Bookstore Fiction: ao;$.5 Master Margarita, by Mikhail BulaaoV; kB ctien$k $5.95. General Book Department A Hall of Mirrors, by Robert Stone; $ -5 5802 ELLIS AVE. i Journey into the Whirlwind, by Eugenia Semyonovna Ginzburg, translated by Paul Stevenson and Max Hayward. Harcourt, Brace & World. $6.95. by Lisbeth Meisner Western critics of Soviet life and lit- erature have shown an almost universal tendency to come down hard on the side of humanitarianism and proclaim that no gains wrought by the Stalinist sys- tem are justified by the suffering it en- tailed. Soviets, on the other hand, since they lived through these years and hence were deprived of the luxury of moral and physical non-involvement, are not nearly so sure about where they stand. There is a persistent feeling of ambig- uity about the Stalin years that is shared by many, if not most, Soviets. It is well- reflected in Mrs. Ginzburg's book., Arrested in 1937 on charges of "Trot- skyism," Mrs. Ginzburg was taken from her family and job as a teacher in Ka- zan, and spent the next 18 years in pris- ons and labor camps. Surprisingly, she is still alive and working in Moscow, al- though her memoirs, which circulated around Moscow in manuscript form, were sent a la Pasternak to Italy for publication in the West. Journey into the Whirlwind recounts her life for the first three years after her arrest - the unexpected summons to NKVD headquarters, the brutal interro- gation, during which she refused to sign false confessions or betray her friends and colleagues, and the final deportation to the notorious Kamchatka region of the Soviet Far East. For her, as for so many party intel- lectuals of the "revolutionary genera- tion," Stalin's ugly transformation of So- viet life produced an almost unbearable moral dilemma: "Everything I had in the world - the thousands of books I had read, memories of my youth, and the very endurance which was keeping me from going under - all this had been given me by the Soviet system and the revolution which had transformed my world when I was still a child. How ex- citing life had been and how gloriously everything had begun! What in God's name had happened to us all?" The Party has, of course, attempted to answer this question by asserting that Stalinism was an illness which has been brought under control, if not completely cured, by the swift surgery of 1956. Mrs. Ginzburg ends her book with a routine bow in this direction, "The great Lenin- ist truths have again come into their own in our country and Party. Today the people can already be told of things that have been and shall be no more." The almost deliberate absurdity of these statements jars with the admirable po- etic style of the rest of the book, but not ... And a spoof on Russia's own Shirle Temple really m to come poses so to us all Indeed ence ha cause s knowled inist era but the: which a action. 1 set, who wrote a life con personal possible enwald, retrospe tion of r+ sive inju: This great ce rather (and Na of Soviet signs of would b nist part Thus, it Soviet (a to be w German a count party (o ject to These tellectua their sha paralysis day, for clear tha a great d unnoticea argumen sity" or course a with the parties (c To ex Ginzburg ner in wh and part in Stalin berate h (increasi The disaf that to co simply a pening," maintain surrounds not simp perpetuat resigning horrors, e The pr fronted b tions is 1 Smetana and the Beetles, by Al- bert E. Kahn. Illustrated by David Levine. Random House. $2.95. by Harvey Wasserman When I first saw Svetlana Stalina I thought the editors of Reader's Digest had disguised Snooky Lanson and flown him in from Europe to malign the 50th anniversary of the Outside Agitators' plot to overthrow the beloved Tsar. But, alas, alack and well-a-day, Svet- lana is real. Her image is real good. Her book is real bad and has added nothing to the world's understanding of Russia or Papa Joe. But it's been fun. And the book which captures all the fun is Smetana and the Beetles, a well- written and magnificently illustrated vol- ume which accurately portrays the flight of Russia's own Shirley Temple in search of Lennon, and its exploitation by People's Publishers and People's Clerk in Attendance (CIA) in illustrating that in Freeland Inc., "Just follow the Red-White-and-Blue Rainbow. There's a Pot of Gold at the end." Perhaps Svetlana doesn't deserve all that dumped on her head. She seems, after all, nice enough, even if "she was no go-go Gogol; her Diary, no Zhivago- go." But in the land where "Flower children danced in the Streets,/and there were fireworks even in the Ghet- toes," anybody with a tear to shed about Life with Father in the Gremlin is bound to make it big. Mr. Wasserman is a first-year graduate student in the Department of History at the University of Chicago. 12 2 CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEW December, 1967