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Ancient Greek Myth in Angelos Sikelianos

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2016

Extract

In the introduction to Angelos Sikelianos: Selected Poems, the translators speak of Sikelianos’s ‘mythological attitude… toward life’ and of his conception of myth not so much ‘as a rhetorical or metaphorical device but as a spontaneous creation of the human soul directed toward the revelation of a hidden spiritual life’, in short, of mythology as a kind of religion closely related to Schelling’s perception of the function of myth. These remarks, written originally some years ago, may have their just proportion of truth, but in keeping with most introductory remarks, they strike me as rather too general, rather too undiscriminating when one brings them face to face with Sikelianos’s practice at different moments of his career. I want to try to be more discriminating by considering the role of myth - specifically ancient Greek myth - in the poet’s work both early and late in his career. I think it is a changing role, perhaps not in his fundamental association of gods with a contemporary landscape and his revelation of those mysteries that lie hidden in our everyday lives, but in the mode of this association and this revelation, and in the depth of their poetic significance.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies, University of Birmingham 1981

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References

1. Translated and introduced by Keeley, Edmund and Sherrard, Philip (Princeton, 1979).Google Scholar