Image for The Oxopetra Elegies and West of Sorrow

The Oxopetra Elegies and West of Sorrow

Part of the Harvard Early Modern and Modern Greek Library series
See all formats and editions

This volume contains translations of two late collections by Odysseas Elytis (Nobel Prize for literature, 1979).

According to the official announcement of the Swedish Academy, the Nobel Prize was awarded to Elytis “for his poetry, which, against the background of Greek tradition, depicts with sensuous strength and intellectual clear-sightedness modern man's struggle for freedom and creativeness.” The Oxopetra Elegies, which he published in November 1991 at the age of eighty, was immediately hailed as one of his finest works.

Far from being a dialogue with death, as many critics hastily concluded, these elegies are laments for what is seen and perceived in certain “timeless moments” that, like the Oxopetra headland, project into the beyond, into another reality, revealing truths that, to the poet’s constant dismay, remain “unverifiable” and “unutterable.” The poems here function as a “contemporary form of magic,” a key opening the portals to this other reality, at least for those who speak Elytis’ language: the language of the Secret Sun.

In West of Sorrow, published in November 1995, only months before his death, it becomes even clearer that his poetry remains, as it always was, a paean to life and love and beauty.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£23.96 Save 20.00%
RRP £29.95
Product Details
0674063430 / 9780674063433
Hardback
889.132
31/03/2014
United States
English
150 p.
22 cm