Sherry Chandler » 2008 » July » 26

A New Age

So an age ended, and its last deliverer died
In bed, grown idle and unhappy; they were safe:
The sudden shadow of a giant’s enormous calf
Would fall no more at dusk across their lawns outside.

They slept in peace: in marshes here and there no doubt
A sterile dragon lingered to a natural death,
But in a year the spoor had vanished from the heath:
A kobold’s knocking in the mountain petered out.

Only the sculptors and the poets were half sad,
And the pert retinue from the magician’s house
Grumbled and went elsewhere. The vanished powers were glad

To be invisible and free; without remorse
Struck down the sons who strayed in their course,
And ravished the daughters, and drove the fathers mad.

— W. H. Auden, Selected Poems (Modern Library, 1959)

This post was written by sherry

Waiting for the Barbarians

What are we waiting for, assembled in the forum?

          The barbarians are due here today.

Why isn’t anything happening in the senate?
Why do the senators sit there without legislating?

         Because the barbarians are coming today.
         What laws can the senators make now?
         Once the barbarians are here, they’ll do the legislating.

Why did our emperor get up so early,
and why is he sitting at the city’s main gate
on his throne, in state, wearing the crown?

         Because the barbarians are coming today
         and the emperor is waiting to receive their leader.
         He has even prepared a scroll to give him,
         replete with titles, with imposing names.

Why have our two consuls and praetors come out today
wearing their embroidered, their scarlet togas?
Why have they put on bracelets with so many amethysts,
and rings sparkling with magnificent emeralds?
Why are they carrying elegant canes
beautifully worked in silver and gold?

          Because the barbarians are coming today
          and things like that dazzle the barbarians.

Why don’t our distinguished orators come forward as usual
to make their speeches, say what they have to say?

          Because the barbarians are coming today
         and they’re bored by rhetoric and public speaking.

Why this sudden restlessness, this confusion?
(How serious people’s faces have become.)
Why are the streets and squares emptying so rapidly,
everyone going home so lost in thought?

          Because night has fallen and the barbarians have not come.
         And some who have just returned from the border say
         there are no barbarians any longer.

And now, what’s going to happen to us without barbarians?
They were, those people, a kind of solution.

—Constantine Cavafy , translated by Edmund Keeley, text from UPenn

(NB: If you watch Terry Jones’s documentary series “The Barbarians,” you’ll learn that there never were any barbarians at the Roman gates, at least not in the sense we’ve always been taught: “And then there were the Dark Ages.”]

This post was written by sherry