Ithaca
The Cyclops by Odilon Redon
As you set out on the way to
Ithaca
hope that the road is a long
one,
filled with adventures, filled
with understanding.
The Laestrygonians and the
Cyclopes,
Poseidon in his anger: do not
fear them,
you’ll never come across them
on your way
as long as your mind stays
aloft, and a choice
emotion touches your spirit
and your body.
The Laestrygonians and the
Cyclopes,
savage Poseidon; you’ll not
encounter them
unless you carry them within
your soul,
unless your soul sets them up
before you.
Hope that the road is a long
one.
Many may the summer mornings
be
when—with what pleasure, with
what joy—
you first put in to harbors
new to your eyes;
may you stop at Phoenician
trading posts
and there acquire fine goods:
mother-of-pearl and coral,
amber and ebony,
and heady perfumes of every
kind:
as many heady perfumes as you
can.
To many Egyptian cities may
you go
so you may learn, and go on
learning, from their sages.
Always keep Ithaca in your
mind;
to reach her is your destiny.
But do not rush your journey
in the least.
Better that it last for many
years;
that you drop anchor at the
island an old man,
rich with all you’ve gotten on
the way,
not expecting Ithaca to make
you rich.
Ithaca gave to you the
beautiful journey;
without her you’d not have set
upon the road.
But she has nothing left to
give you any more.
And if you find her poor,
Ithaca did not deceive you.
As wise as you’ll have become,
with so much experience,
you’ll have understood, by
then, what these Ithacas mean.
Konstantinos Kavafis (C. P. Cavafy)