Bodies Out of Time: Sculpting Queer Poetics and Queering Classical Sculpture in the Poetry of C. P. Cavafy

Two major themes dominate the poetry of the Alexandrian poet, C. P. Cavafy: homosexual desire and Greekness, broadly defined. This paper explores the interconnectivity of these motifs, showing how Cavafy’s poetic queerness is expressed through his relationship with the ancient Greek world, especially Hellenistic Alexandria. I focus on Cavafy’s incorporation of ancient sculpture into his poetry and the ways that sculpture, for Cavafy, is a vehicle for expressing forbidden desires in an acceptable way. In this, I draw on the works of Liana Giannakopoulou on statuary in modern Greek poetry and Dimitris Papanikolaou on Cavafy’s homosexuality and its presentation in the poetry. Sculpture features in around a third of Cavafy’s poems and pervades it in various ways: the inclusion of physical statues as focuses of ecphrastic description, the use of sculptural language and metaphor, and the likening of Cavafy’s beloveds to Greek marbles of the past, to name but three. This article argues that Cavafy utilizes the statuary of the ancient Greek world as raw material, from which he sculpts his modern Greek queerness, variously desiring the statuesque bodies of contemporary Alexandrian youths and constructing eroticized depictions of ancient Greek marbles. The very ontology of queerness is, for Cavafy, ‘created’ using explicitly sculptural metaphors (e.g. the repeated uses of the verb κάνω [‘to make’] in descriptions of ‘those made like me’) and he employs Hellenistic statues as a productive link between his desires and so-called ‘Greek desire’, placing himself within a continuum of queer, Greek men.

1 3 scholarship, grafting the work of Papanikolaou on queerness in Cavafy onto Giannakopoulou's research into the role of statuary and sculpture in modern Greek poetry. This paper argues that Cavafy took the apparently blank slate of his Greek past and from it sculpted a queer poetics of reception, repurposing ancient Greek art to carve out modern Greek queerness. Few of the classical sources used by Cavafy which I discuss in this article are explicitly homoerotic in the original, but some have great queer potential, on which the poet draws. Central to my discussion below is the way in which Cavafy both responds to references to classical homoerotics (such as his adoption of Platonic imagery) and queers classical images which are not inherently queer, exploiting their untapped queer potential (such as the statue of Endymion).
My argument comprises two strands which I synthesize to make a claim about Cavafian poetics. 10 First, I argue that Cavafy is not only a homosexual man who wrote about beautiful men, but that his poetry is deeply concerned with queerness and queer articulations; second, I build on Giannakopoulou's thesis of sculpture as modal in Cavafy's poetry to propose that this sculptural modality constitutes a specifically queer sculptural poetics. Finally, I weave these two strands together to explore how queer themes and queer sculptural poetics operate within Cavafy's poetry, through the eroticization of sculptural bodies. When Cavafy, like a reverse Pygmalion, turns his beloveds into sculptures, he aestheticizes and eternalizes vulnerable bodies, not only in the words he writes, but in the way he writes them. To adapt Muñoz, he distils a queer ideality from the past and uses it to imagine a future: 11 a potential future in which queer bodies may be un-queered and be free from the social disapproval which necessitates the poet to cloak them in marble.
The wretched laws of society-the result of neither hygiene nor judgementhave lessened my work. They have blocked my freedom of expression; they have impeded me from giving light and emotion to those who are made just like me. The difficult circumstances of my life made it hard for me to become a [fluent] English speaker. What a shame! If I put the same struggles in French, maybe I could have expressed myself more freely, because of the ease with which the pronouns both reveal and conceal-if circumstances had allowed me, if the French tongue was just as useful to me… But, what can I do? I'm wasting away, aesthetically. And I will remain the object of conjecture; and they will understand most deeply from the things I denied. 13 From the first words of the note ('the wretched laws of society'), Cavafy has marked himself as separate from and, in some sense, in opposition to the customs of those around him. Instead, he has carved out for himself a different community, consisting of ὅσους εἶναι σάν κ' ἐμένα καμωμένοι ('those who are made just like me'). When Cavafy employs forms of the verb κάνω, he often uses it in a similar sense to 13 Greek from Κ. Π. Καβάφης: Ανέκδοτα σημειώματα ποιητικής και ηθικής (1902)(1903)(1904)(1905)(1906)(1907)(1908)(1909)(1910)(1911), ed. G. P. Savidis, Athens, 2009, p. 36 ('Note 13'); translation, mine. This short prose note provided the title for Papanikolaou's Σαν κ' εμένα καμωμένοι (n. 12 above); see his pp. 117-19. Cf. a similar idea in 'Hidden Things', ending 'κατόπι-στὴν τελειοτέρα κοινωνία-/ κανένας ἄλλος καμωμένος σὰν ἐμένα / βέβαια θὰ φανεῖ κ' ἐλεύθερα θὰ κάμει' ('later, in a more perfect society, / someone else made just like me / is certain to appear and act freely'; 12-14; Greek from Κ. Π. Καβάφης: Κρυμμένα ποιήματα. 1877;-1923, ed. G. P. Savidis Athens, 1993. Cf. Cavafy's blaming of society for queerphobia (not queerness per se) in 'Days of 1896'. πλάθω (see below); it takes on the sense of 'create' and connotes a constructed state of being. When Cavafy allies himself with 'ὅσους εἶναι σάν κ' ἐμένα καμωμένοι' ('those who are made just like me'), he places himself as part of a group identity, by which he clearly means 'queer' or 'homosexual'. 14 Cavafy's poetry rarely presents us with clear images of a 'queer subculture', as it were, but an obvious example where such a trope obtains is 'In a town of Osroini': Ἀπ' τῆς ταβέρνας τὸν καυγᾶ μᾶς φέραν πληγωμένο τὸν φίλον Ρέμωνα χθὲς περὶ τὰ μεσάνυχτα. Ἀπ' τὰ παράθυρα τοῦ ἀφίσαμεν ὁλάνυχτα, τ' ὡραῖο του σῶμα στὸ κρεββάτι φώτιζε ἡ σελήνη. Εἴμεθα ἕνα κρᾶμα ἐδῶ· Σύροι, Γραικοί, Ἀρμένιοι, Μῆδοι. Τέτοιος κι ὁ Ρέμων εἶναι. Ὅμως χθὲς σὰν φώτιζε τὸ ἐρωτικό του πρόσωπο ἡ σελήνη, ὁ νοῦς μας πῆγε στὸν πλατωνικὸ Χαρμίδη.
Yesterday, around midnight, they brought us our friend Remon, who'd been wounded in a taverna fight. Through the windows we left wide open, the moon cast light over his beautiful body as it lay on the bed. We're a mixture here: Syrians, immigrant Greeks, Armenians, Medes. Remon is one of these too. But last night, when the moon shone on his sensual face, our thoughts went back to Plato's Charmidis.
This poem sees the Cavafian persona, together with a group of multiracial friends, admiring the sensual face (τὸ ἐρωτικό του πρόσωπο) of their friend Remon. In this poem, the group is unified by their diversity; this diversity is usually translated with reference to the group's racial variation, 15 but the phrase ἕνα κρᾶμα does not only specify racial intermingling. It is an image from metallurgy, referring to an alloy of two or more metals. 16 The sense is one of a new entity formed out of other things, defined by, but different from, its composite parts. This alloy could also be seen as a queer community, bridging racial differences in favour of a shared experience: the contemplation of the beautiful young Remon. The action is collective, stressed by the first-person plural verbs and pronouns (μας, ἀφίσαμεν, εἴμεθα), and the use of the singular ὁ νοῦς, a singular mentality shared by the whole group. 17 The queerness of this scene is immediately apparent from how the collective gazes upon Remon as a sight, posed dramatically in the moonlight, 18 but is heightened when we unpack the nature of that sight. Remon's is a brutalized body and, beyond a mention of a tavern brawl, no cause is given to this. Given this poem's focus on queer community and evocation of Classical homoerotic subtext (see below), I propose that it is possible to see Remon's body as one brutalized in homophobic violence, which is brought back to his queer family. The community then cares for the victim, sharing in sympathy for violence which they could imagine affecting any one of them.
'Osroini's queerness is also constituted by the classicizing reference to Plato. The Charmides is a Platonic dialogue about σωφροσυνή ('temperance'), in which the principal characters are Socrates and the ephebic youth, Charmides. Socrates's homoerotic attraction to Charmides is repeatedly stressed in the dialogue; perhaps most relevant to a discussion of 'Osroini' is Socrates's description upon seeing the youth: εἶδόν τε τὰ ἐντὸς τοῦ ἱματίου καὶ ἐφλεγόμην καὶ οὐκέτ᾿ ἐν ἐμαυτοῦ ἦν ('and I saw what was within his cloak and I burned with passion and was no longer within myself'; Pl. Chrm. 155D). 19 As they gaze on a beautiful body, Cavafy's constructed queer community collectively 'remember' the homoerotically charged Platonic text in which another figure looks desirously at the male form. 20 I see this poem as indicating 17 See R. Dellamora, 'Greek Desire and Modern Sexualities', in Imagination and Logos: Essays on C. P. Cavafy, ed. P. Roilos, Cambridge (MA), 2010, pp. 121-42's notion that homosocial 'fellowship' in Cavafy 'carries a coded, personal signification of a group of young men, joined by the shared sensation and affects of male intimacy' (p. 126) and that it creates 'transnational affinity groups, affiliated though shared linguistic, aesthetic, and sexual tastes' (p. 128). 18 Cf. 'Before the statue of Endymion', in which there is another erotic, semi-clothed, male body recumbent; see my discussion below. The presence of ἡ σελήνη ('the moon') in 'Osroini' figures the absent presence of the goddess Selene in 'Endymion', connecting the body of Remon to other queered bodies in Cavafy's oeuvre. 19 Plato likens Charmides's beauty to a statue at Chrm. 154c: ἀλλὰ πάντες ὥσπερ ἄγαλμα ἐθεῶντο αὐτόν ('but we are all gazing at him like a statue'); cf. the presentation of queer lovers as statues in Plato's Symposium (e.g. 215a-b; 216d-217a). For (homo)erotic statue imagery in Plato, see D. Steiner, 'For Love of A Statue: A Reading of Plato's Symposium 215A-B', Ramus, 25.2, 1996, pp. 89-111. 20 Cavafy's queer alloy may also be remembering Wilde's 1881 poem 'Charmides', which is also rich in queer subtexts; C. P. Cavafy that Cavafy may have conceived of his queer identity as something not unique to himself, which participated in a queer continuum dating back to Plato. 21 Many of Cavafy's poems are concerned with articulating his queer 'slight angle to the universe'; in these, he withdraws from common society into a self-imposed exile, sculpting out his own role as an outsider to society. Cavafy was a solitary figure whose poetics are markedly concerned with separation between public and private, mundane and artistic, societal expectation and poetic nonconformism. 22 In poems such as 'Walls', Papanikolaou has identified the isolated space within the self-imposed rooms of Cavafy's poetry as a sort of 'closet', in which the poet is bound by his sexuality, 23 but also from which he is able to negotiate the terms of the disclosure of his (homo)sexuality. 24 A prime example of this Cavafian negotiation of disclosure may be found in his letters to Forster. In a letter dated 4 August 1922, 25 Cavafy implores Forster to edit his article 'The Poetry of C. P. Cavafy' between publications; the original version of the article, published in The Athenaeum, 26 describes the object of 'In the month of Athyr' as 'a boy of sixteen' (248). The age is simply a mistake-Cavafy's Greek prints 'Κάππα Ζῆτα' on line 5, which means 27, not 16-but Cavafy is particular about the term 'boy', writing 'naturally, the word "boy" to be replaced by some other term'. Forster clearly understood Cavafy's insinuation and, in the article's reprint in Pharos and Pharillon, he corrected to 'a young man'. 27 21 Cavafy was aware of how his queerness was intricately related to his literary and cultural inheritance from the classical world; see D. Cavafy, then, positions himself on the edge of society, looking in at it from a queer angle; in 'Chandelier', 28 Cavafy defines himself and his desire as something other and deviant in the eyes of τὸ συνειθισμένο ('the ordinary' or, perhaps, 'heterosexual'). His desires are characterized as not made for ἄτολμα σώματα ('timid bodies'), 29 and therefore as desires which require τόλμη ('daring') and which run a rough, countercultural course. Whether such a stance was pure poetics or 'real' biography is immaterial; his poetics display him as existing parallel to his Alexandrian community, not thriving within it. This mode is perhaps clearest in 'Growing in Spirit': Ὅποιος τὸ πνεῦμα του ποθεῖ νὰ δυναμώσει νὰ βγεῖ ἀπ' τὸ σέβας κι ἀπό τὴν ὑποταγή. Ἀπὸ τοὺς νόμους μερικοὺς θὰ τοὺς φυλάξει ἀλλὰ τὸ περισσότερο θὰ παραβαίνει καὶ νόμους κ' ἔθιμα κι ἀπ' τὴν παραδεγμένη καὶ τὴν ἀνεπαρκοῦσα εὐθύτητα θὰ βγεῖ. Ἀπὸ τὲς ἡδονὲς πολλὰ θὰ διδαχθεῖ. Τὴν καταστρεπτικὴ δὲν θὰ φοβᾶται πρᾶξι· τὸ σπίτι τὸ μισὸ πρέπει νὰ γκρεμισθεῖ. Ἔτσι θ' ἀναπτυχθεῖ ἐνάρετα στὴν γνῶσι.
He who hopes to grow in spirit will have to transcend obedience and respect. He'll hold to some laws but he'll mostly violate both law and custom, and go beyond the established, inadequate norm. Sensual pleasures will have much to teach him. He will not be afraid of the destructive act: half the house will have to come down. This way he will grow virtuously into wisdom. 30 Footnote 27 (continued) participants in this system, Cavafy, in this letter and elsewhere, takes pains to stress the adulthood of his beloveds; see e.g. 'Two young men, 23 to 24 years old'. In doing so, Cavafy cherry-picks some aspects of 'Greek love', without importing its more problematic features. 28 Ekdawi, 'Mythical Ephebes' (n. 3 above), p. 35 detects visual parallels between the chamber described in 'Chandelier' and the bedroom of Alfred Taylor, which was depicted luridly in the British press after he went on trial alongside Oscar Wilde in 1895 for gross indecency. Ekdawi also elucidates that 'Chandelier' was written in the same month that these news stories broke. If we follow the connection Ekdawi makes, we see Cavafy establishing a queer sympathy with other men whom he sees as subject to the same desires as himself. Cavafy left a note on the poem (F88, φ29; see n. 45) in which he characterizes the room in 'Chandelier' as representing an extreme youthful zeal for eroticism but a zeal which requires some degree of courage to be realized. 29 Again, Cavafy's desires are presented with a form of the verb κάνω ('to make'), for which, see below. 30 Text from Savidis, Κρυμμένα (n. 13 above).
Cavafy is here unabashedly countercultural, holding reverence for neither νόμοι ('laws') nor ἔθιμα ('customs'), instead claiming that ἡδονές ('sensual pleasures') will be his teachers. The theme of ἡδονή is prevalent throughout Cavafy's work, 31 and often, as here, it is implicitly tied up with specifically homoerotic pleasure. 32 Pleasures, as Jeffreys elucidates, are almost always attached to ἀλγοῖ ('pains'). 33 Pains and sickness are ubiquitous in Cavafy's poetry, picking up on the Classical trope of love-as-sickness; 34 however, sickness in Cavafy is queered and is specifically used to describe queer love. 35 Indeed, it is fairly common for Cavafy to use a variation on 'unhealthy love' as analogic for 'queer'; for instance, in 'In an old book', Cavafy examines a homoerotic watercolour painting, of which he says 'ἦταν φανερὸ … / ποῦ γιὰ ὅσους ἀγαποῦνε κάπως ὑγιεινά, / … δὲν ἦταν προωρισμένος ὁ ἔφηβος / τῆς ζωγραφιᾶς' ('it became clear … / that the young man depicted there / was not destined for those / who love in ways that are more or less healthy'; 7-12). Similarly, in 'The twenty-fifth year of his life', queer love is pathologized as a sickness: ἀρρώστησεν ὁ νοῦς του ἀπὸ λαγνεία /… παθαίνεται ἀπ' τὸν διαρκῆ πόθον ἡ σάρκα του ὅλη ('his mind's sick with longing / … his flesh, all of it, suffers from endless desire'; 13-15). There exists, then, in Cavafy's poetics, a tension between ὐγιεινή ('hygiene') and ἀρρώστια ('sickness'), which can be seen throughout the corpus: 36 the 'sanitary' or 'healthy' in Cavafy represents heterosexual normativity, whereas 'sickness' is constitutive of deviant queer desire. By examining the dynamics of these two themes (pleasure and sickness), it becomes clear that Cavafy's is not a poetry of the present, but of the present remembering a lost and irretrievable past, a 'hedonalgic' moment bifurcated between the sexual delights of youth and the wise reflections of old age. My coinage-hedonalgia (literally ἡδονή + ἄλγος)-is an attempt to capture Foucault's diagnosis of the queer condition, spelled out in an interview with James O'Higgins: …for a homosexual, the best moment of love is when the lover leaves in the taxi. It is when the act is over and the boy is gone that one begins to dream about the warmth of his body, the quality of his smile, the tone of his voice. It is the recollection rather than the anticipation of the act that assumes a primary importance in homosexual relations. 38 Most frequently, the hedonalgic mode sees the Cavafian persona gazing back from an experienced position of seniority and re-examining the wild sensuality of his youth; 39 however, this article is concerned with Cavafy's 'memories' of the ancient world. As I suggested above, Cavafy's queer hedonalgia sometimes looks beyond the fleeting pleasures of the poet's own youth to the homoeroticisms of the Hellenistic age. He sees, in the ancient Greek world, analogues for the sort of desire he experiences in twentieth-century Alexandria and recognizes ephebic, 40 often Alexandrian, youths from antiquity as interchangeable with the objects of his own desire. The past is a canvas of potentiality onto which Cavafy can project his understanding of his sexuality, and from which he can extract inspiration. This is clearly expressed in 'Days of 1909, '10, and '11'; in the first two stanzas, Cavafy describes a poor ironmonger and sex worker to whom he is attracted, recounting in some detail the trappings of poverty, such as the man's torn shoes. In the third stanza, the poet directly melds the twentieth-century youth-the period is emphasized by the poem's title 41 -with an imagined beauty of antiquity: Διερωτῶμαι ἂν στοὺς ἀρχαίους καιροὺς εἶχεν ἡ ἔνδοξη Ἀλεξάνδρεια νέον πιὸ περικαλλῆ, πιὸ τέλειο ἀγόρι ἀπὸ αὐτὸν-ποῦ πῆε χαμένος: δὲν ἔγινε, ἐννοεῖται, ἄγαλμά του ἢ ζωγραφία· I ask myself if the great Alexandria of ancient times could boast of a boy more exquisite, more perfect-thoroughly neglected though he was: that is, we don't have a statue or painting of him; 42 The relationship between queerness and temporality has long been documented by queer theorists. 43 Indeed, 'queer connections are frequently brought about by acts of bending time, productive mobilisations of anachronism, and momentary or sustained transitions from temporal normativities into osmotic temporalities'. 44 Manipulation of temporalities and exploration of different temporal potentialities is a particularly queer literary phenomenon and Cavafy's evocation of the ancient world and injection of it into the early twentieth century demonstrates the sorts of aesthetic sympathies which Muñoz diagnoses as belonging to a conception of the present 'in relation to the alternative temporal and spatial maps provided by a perception of past and future affective worlds'. 45 In Cavafy's conjuring of the ancient boy in this poem, he melds past and present to synthesize an affective poetic reality of transhistorical queer sentiment.
This synthesis is reflected even at the linguistic level, where the demotic Greek word ἀγόρι describes the imaginary ancient youth and the classicising katharevousa form περικαλλής is applied to the modern, flesh-and-blood young man. In fusing the youths, Cavafy's queer lens comes up against the men's differing social contexts: he wrote in a note on the poem that the beautiful youth of Alexandria past was free of the constraints of social opprobrium towards homosexual love, and thus could have statues and paintings made of his beauty, whereas the ironmonger could have no such commemoration. 46 The terms of the youth's commemoration are explicitly sculptural; Cavafy establishes statuary as a means by which queer love can survive the ravages of time. The reference to statuary sets up the theme on which the remainder of this article will focus, namely, how Cavafy uses real or imagined sculpture from the ancient Greek world to frame and explicate his desires. Temporal displacement as a mode of conceiving of the youths whom Cavafy desires is ubiquitous within the Cavafian corpus, as is illustrated in 'On board ship', 9-10: Πιὸ ἔμορφος μὲ φανερώνται τώρα ποῦ ἡ ψυχή μου τὸν ἀνακαλεί, ἀπ' τὸν Καιρό. He appears to me better looking now that my soul brings him back, out of Time.
Just as the youth in 'On board ship' is pulled 'out of Time' through a sketch, the statuesque youths in the poems which I discuss in this article are pulled 'out of Time' through references to the ancient world.

Sculpture
Cavafy's poetry is deeply concerned with sculptural imagery, 47 language and themes; sculptural motifs in Cavafy have been well examined by Giannakopoulou, so I shall dwell on them only briefly here. Giannakopoulou focuses on how sculpture is an instrument of modern Greek poetics: "for many Greeks, particularly in the nineteenth century… sculpture becomes the symbolic incarnation of liberty and the justification of [modern Greece's] very existence". 48 However, I propose a different and specifically queer articulation of the theme of sculpture in Cavafy's poetics. First, in this section, I explore how Cavafy generally uses statuary to articulate a connection to the ancient world, before, in section three, proposing a queer orientation of sculpture.
Cavafy's mot juste for creative activities is τέχνη ('art'), often capitalized to imbue it with quasi-divine power. 49 The first thing which must be said about such a loaded word is that it is even broader than English's already capacious term 'art'; τέχνη can refer to a massive range of artistic or crafting pursuits, 50 and in Cavafy is interchangeably applied to poetry, sculpture and painting. 51 For my purposes, I concern myself only with its sculptural meanings. Giannakopoulou estimates that Cavafy's 'sculpture-related corpus' constitutes some 20 poems, 52 although this may be a conservative estimate, due to the centrality of sculpture to his poetics. Giannakopoulou also details how Cavafy's process of artistic production directly mirrors the creative process of a sculptor, 53 namely: he works slowly, often leaving many years between a poem's inception and its publication; 54 he takes a lengthy work, and slowly shaves and thins it down to a smoother and more refined piece of art; he conceives of poetry as a physically statuesque thing, describing it as λεῖος ('polished'). 55 Significantly, Cavafy repeatedly uses sculptural vocabulary when describing the process of imaginative creation. The verbs πλάθω ('to mould') and σχηματίζω ('to form') are ubiquitous in his work; 56 in addition, the verb κάνω, though not exclusively sculptural, is extremely frequent in Cavafy's poetry, with a clear sense of 'to make' or 'to craft' in an artistic manner. This motif is especially well expressed in the famous poem 'Kaisarion': … Στὴν ἱστορία λίγες γραμμὲς μονάχα βρίσκονται γιὰ σένα, κ' ἔτσι πιὸ ἐλεύθερα σ' ἔπλασα μὲς στὸν νοῦ μου. Σ' ἔπλασα ὡραῖο κ' αἰσθηματικό. Ἡ τέχνη μου στὸ πρόσωπό σου δείνει μιὰν ὀνειρώδη συμπαθητικὴ ἐμορφιά.
Because so little is known about you from history, I could mould you more freely in my mind. I moulded you good-looking and sensitive. My art gives your face a dreamy, appealing beauty.

[Italics denote my alterations to Keeley & Sherrard's translation] 57
In this poem, Cavafy calls up a ghost of the Alexandrian prince Kaisarion, at once making him flesh and stone; by calling Kaisarion αἰσθηματικός, Cavafy evokes αἰσθητική ('aesthetics') and the idea of art criticism, though his word means 'sensitive'. Although the boy is imagined to be alive in Cavafy's transhistorical evocation, he is also cast as something πλασμένο, sculpted out by Cavafy's τέχνη, to become himself a τέχνη. 58 In a way which is reminiscent of my earlier comments on the verb κάνω, Cavafy here uses sculptural metaphor, not only to describe a highly eroticised body, but also to explicate the process of literary poiesis. 59 In the Cavafian 55 'For Ammonis, who died at 29, in 610', 3. The motifs of slimming down, hard work and polishing are reminiscent of the Hellenistic aesthetics of poetry and poetic process, deployed by, e.g., Callimachus and his Roman imitators. We must, therefore, be alert to this allusion in Cavafy's poetics. Indeed 58 Cf. 'In the same space', 3, 5: Σὲ δημιούργησα μὲς σὲ χαρὰ καὶ μὲς σὲ λύπες:/ … Κ' αἰσθηματοποιήθκες ὁλόκληρο, γιὰ μένα ('I created you while I was happy, while I was sad/ … And, for me, the whole of you has been transformed into feeling'). 59 Cavafy's focus on the process of poetic creation is reminiscent of ancient discussions of poiesis ('artistic production'); see Arist. imagination, then, even queer identity is characterized as constructed by the same language which constructs visual arts.
Ancient statues represent a number of different things to Cavafy, including the eternal memorializing of homoerotics and the ability to present them unabashedly in a public setting. The statue is always a stand in, a substituting symbol for an absent presence. 60 For the twentieth-century Cavafian persona, gazing at the publicly displayed statue of a beautiful Hellenistic ephebe, it is a stand in for being able to perform his own queer identity in public, as he believed the Greeks of the past were able to. 61 The queer sculptures of Cavafy's poetry occupy a liminal phase between indestructible stone and vulnerable flesh, entities whose impermanence Cavafy understands, but unavoidably seeks to deny behind a marble veneer. The censured desire for transient youth is represented as something both permitted and eternal in Cavafy's sculptural poetry.
The poet's use of the diegetic creative act (i.e. the presence of actual statuary) extends to the level of his poetics, 62 to the extent that sculpture and the beautiful bodies it entails are intimately interwoven with his mode of discourse. Because these diegetic sculptures feature objects of desire who are male and for whom 'real' attraction would be illicit, when the sculptural discourse reaches the level of mode, the poetics themselves become queer. As Giannakopoulou has argued, many modern Greek poets use sculpture not only in their content, but also at the level of conceptualizing their creative process. This takes on queer articulations in Cavafy because the statues of his poetry are homoerotic. Homoerotic male sculpture is not an incidental feature of Cavafy's poetry; it is integral to the constitution of his poetics' queer 'angle to the universe'.

Queering Sculpture
To talk of 'queering' implies an active engagement by an author, not simply a passive reception of homoerotic history. 63 It is a process of taking the origins of queerness in the ancient world-origins which themselves may not represent any explicitly queer characters 64 -and recasting them into queerer, twentieth-century moulds. In discussing this queer turn, I follow Sara Ahmed's Queer Phenomenology. Ahmed discusses the complex relations between objects in the world and queer phenomenological orientations towards them; her primary example is a table, arguing that she has 'made the table a rather queer object by attending to it'. 65 For Ahmed, phenomenological queering is a process in which jilted orientations may be taken to proximal objects, where the quotidian is rearticulated from a queer angle; 66 statues from ancient Greece may not be quotidian objects in everyday life, but they are, as Giannakopoulou has demonstrated, a conventional feature of modern Greek poetry. Cavafy, then, as I shall demonstrate, orients himself to these unexceptional motifs from a distinctly queer angle.
The locus classicus for such queer manipulation in Cavafy is 'Kaisarion' (see above), but I will explore the more unambiguously sculptural poem 'Before the statue of Endymion', which displays techniques which I suggest are present throughout the corpus: Ἐπὶ ἅρματος λευκοῦ ποῦ τέσσαρες ἡμίονοι πάλλευκοι σύρουν, μὲ κοσμήματ' ἀργυρᾶ, φθάνω ἐκ Μιλήτου εἰς τὸν Λάτμον. Ἱερὰ τελῶν-θυσίας καὶ σπονδὰς-τῷ Ἐνδυμίωνι, ἀπὸ τὴν Ἀλεξάνδρειαν ἔπλευσα ἐν τριήρει πορφυρᾷ.-Ἰδοὺ τὸ ἄγαλμα. Ἐν ἐκστάσει βλέπω νῦν τοῦ Ἐνδυμίωνος τὴν φημισμένην καλλονήν. Ἰάσμων κάνιστρα κενοῦν οἱ δοῦλοι μου· κ' εὐοίωνοι ἐπευφημίαι ἐξύπνησαν ἀρχαίων χρόνων ἡδονήν. Cavafy's subject choice here is no accident. Endymion is a classical figure who had already been subject to queering by other nineteenth-century poets. For instance, Wilde had written an 'Endymion', 67 in which he devotes a queer attention to the Aeolian ephebe, and which employs a similar colour palette to Cavafy's own. Wilde uses a wider range of colours than Cavafy (see below), but prominent among them are purple (10, 24, 38) and silver (39). In Carpenter's Narcissus, the eponymous youth is lavished with (homo-)eroticized praise which Carpenter explicitly likens to Selene's appreciation for Endymion. Thus, Cavafy's erotic Endymion also picks up on other queer Endymiones of the nineteenth century. 68 I turn now to Cavafy's 'Before the statue of Endymion'. There are two features of this poem which are striking: the first is the abundance of colour imagery, the second is the atypically antique feel to Cavafy's poetic 'I'. First, the colours. The Cavafian persona aligns himself with a bleached colour palette: he rides a white chariot ('ἅρματος λευκοῦ'), pulled by even whiter mules ('ἡμίονοι / πάλλευκοι'), decked out with silvery trappings ('κοσμήματ' ἀργυρᾶ') and jasmine ('ἰάσμων κάνιστρα), whereas the chromatic intensity of the ship on which he arrived ('ἐν τριήρει πορφυρᾷ') is temporally distanced and does not belong to the speaker as directly. The persona, then, carves his image out as chromatically statuesque, in some sense mirroring the sculpture to which he is travelling and casting himself as the same sort of queered, antique body.
The almost erotic kinship between the Cavafian speaker and the statue is brought out in the preposition of the poem's title, ἐνώπιον. The word is often rendered, as in the Keeley and Sherrard translation I print, as 'before', but its sense is somewhat stronger and more intimate: 'face to face with'. The word's origin in ὤψ ('face') evinces the parallels which Cavafy delineates in his description of the interaction. Given the typical pose of an Endymion (see below), to be literally face-to-face with Endymion, the speaker would have to be laid on top of the statue, creating a deeply sexual image. Ἐνώπιον is a later edit: Cavafy's original draft of this poem used προ ('before'), 69 but the change to ἐνώπιον marks a conscious repositioning of the speaker from the polite positioning of a museum visitor to a distinctly queer articulation. Cavafy's reorientation to the statue reflects a literally spatial perversion of the typical, or heterosexual, interaction a viewer would have with it, echoing Ahmed's queer phenomenology. 70 His interaction with the statue of Endymion is posed as an intimate-and literal-tête-à-tête between a subject who is as white as a statue and a sculpted object who is presented as lifelike. Now, the poetic ego. The narrator of a Cavafian poem is usually a twentieth-century Alexandrian bringing the past to his modern world; in 'Before the statue of Endymion', the speaker appears to belong to the ancient world of the eponymous statue. He arrives by chariot and trireme, and then performs elaborate rites with a retinue of enslaved people: hardly the trappings of a modern man. This archaizing persona brings me back to my earlier comments on Cavafy's desire to find his place on a queer continuum from the ancient world to his own days; in a poem which has Cavafy gaze at-though not describe in detail-a highly eroticized male body, he takes pains to stress that the voice vocalizing the description is a distinctly ancient one, exculpating the modern poet from his 'ancient' desires. In another poem set in the ancient world, 'Of the Jews (A. D. 50)', Cavafy sculpts another beautiful boy, Ianthis, described as 'σὰν Ἐνδυμίων ἔμορφος' ('beautiful as Endymion'). Ianthis is coded as engaging in homosexual affairs, something which he associates with sculpture ('κυρίαρχη προσήλωσι / σὲ τέλεια καμωμένα καὶ φθαρτὰ ἄσπρα μέλη', 'with its over-riding devotion / to perfectly shaped, corruptible white limbs'), maintaining an association between Endymion, statuary and queerness throughout the Cavafian corpus. Notions of queer counterculture emerge here, too, as Ianthis swears off his homoerotic life-even in AD 50, queerly associated with ancient Greek sculpture-due to the religious pressures of Judaism, before inevitably re-entering the hedonistic world of homoerotics. The following discussion of 'Before the statue of Endymion', then, is coloured by an understanding of these twin Cavafian lenses: self-inscription into a broader discourse of queer poetry about Endymion and a selfconsciously archaizing persona which excuses the poem's eroticism.
My main focus regarding 'Before the statue of Endymion' is that Cavafy queers the myth of Endymion and that he does so through the medium of queered sculpture. As with most Greek myths, Endymion's story varies somewhat between accounts, but the dominant theme is his love for the moon goddess Selene and her attempt to preserve his beauty forever by putting him into an eternal slumber. In most versions, Selene beseeches Zeus to allow Endymion to exist in perpetual sleep rather than dying, and then sleeps with him in his helpless state, to father some fifty children. 71 However, Cavafy's statue of Endymion is not the subject of female desire, but rather of ecstatic male gaze; Keeley and Sherrard's translation irons out some 70 Ahmed, Queer Phenomenology (n. 63 above), especially pp. 78-9. 71 Although Endymion's profession alternates between being a hunter, shepherd or king in different accounts, the general narrative outlined above is preserved in Σ Theoc. 3. 49 of the eroticism in the scene. The interaction is posed as a voyeuristic sight, 72 with the verb βλέπω ('I gaze') focusing in on the singularity of the speaker's perception and narrowing the scope of the poem to the speaker's subjective, erotic reaction to the male nude before him. By focusing on the speaker's reaction, rather than the statue's appearance, Cavafy fosters a deep intimacy between his persona and Endymion, an intimacy from which even the audience is excluded. This singularity of Cavafy's gaze is highlighted by the obscurity of the image. Endymion is never described physically; 73 unlike the visually busy first five lines, full of colour, the closest thing to tangible reality in the final quatrain is 'τὴν φημισμένην καλλονήν' ('the renowned beauty'). Cavafy does not even describe the statue's pose, material or colour, which is especially significant in light of the typical posture of Endymion statues (see below). 74 Keeley and Sherrard's 'in wonder' underplays the orgiastic sensuality of 'ἐκστάσει'; ἔκστασις is here meant in its full quasi-religious, trancelike reverence, 75 a deeply personal connection to the carved body which can only be fully understood by the male voyeur. Indeed, ecstasy is a particularly queer emotional response, as Muñoz discusses, and here it seems to have that force, creating a unifying and 'expansive version of temporality'. 76 Endymion was a popular muse for Classical artists, especially on the sides of sarcophagi, and several works featuring him remain extant. Common to most of these is the sensual image of the reclining male nude, 'posed in an inviting position' and receptive to sexual entreaties, as may be seen in the second-century AD statue below: 77 Anonymous. (Second century AD). Statue of Endymion.
[Marble] Stockholm: Gustav IIIs Antiksmuseum. 78 The recumbent pose initially represented Endymion's passivity with respect to the female agency of Selene, but when the distinctly male and homoerotic narrative voice of Cavafy appropriates this image, Endymion becomes an archetypal submissive ephebe vis-à-vis Cavafy's masculine attention. Giannakopoulou reminds us that the real sculptures which inspired Cavafy's poetry could not, during the poet's lifetime, usually be found in the locations where the ancients had placed them (e.g. in this case, Mt. Latmos) but were to be found in museums and publicly accessible workshops; 79 this suggests to me that the statue of Endymion with which Cavafy would have been most familiar, and which is plausibly the inspiration for this poem, 77 Jeffreys, 'Aesthetic' (n. 30 above), p. 68. This pose is common in Classical depictions of the Endymion story, see, the entries under LIMC 3.1, 726-42. The position is described by Selene at Luc. DDeor. 19: ἐμοὶ μὲν καὶ πάνυ καλός, ὦ Ἀφροδίτη, δοκεῖ, καὶ μάλιστα ὅταν ὑποβαλλόμενος ἐπὶ τῆς πέτρας τὴν χλαμύδα καθεύδῃ τῇ λαιᾷ μὲν ἔχων τὰ ἀκόντια ἤδη ἐκ τῆς χειρὸς ὑπορρέοντα, ἡ δεξιὰ δὲ περὶ τὴν κεφαλὴν ἐς τὸ ἄνω ἐπικεκλασμένη ἐπιπρέπῃ τῷ προσώπῳ περικειμένη, ὁ δὲ ὑπὸ τοῦ ὕπνου λελυμένος ἀναπνέῃ τὸ ἀμβρόσιον ἐκεῖνο ἆσθμα ('oh Aphrodite, to me he is exceptionally handsome, especially whenever he lies down to sleep, casting his cloak on the rock, with the left hand holding his javelins, already slipping through his fingers, and the right curved upwards around his head and whenever he draws attention to his face, by framing it, that boy loosened by sleep, and whenever he breathes that immortal breath'). 78 Photograph by Richard Mortel distributed under a CC-BY 2.0 licence. 79 Giannakopoulou, Power of Pygmalion (n. 16 above), p. 99. is the similarly erotic marble held at the British Museum, 80 which he had often visited during his youth in England. 81 The classicizing nude male body is an acceptable object of admiration in art, whose sheer eroticism had somewhat lessened in the eyes of a general Victorian audience; its queerness becomes a sort of erudite cipher among intellectuals who more solidly understood how and why male nudes were so celebrated in the ancient world: a secret knowledge about which marked one as queer. 82 Cavafy uses the classical nude as a marker like Wilde and Pater's use of music, 83 something which denotes the queerness of the scene but only to a knowing audience. The sexualized, beautiful marble works neatly for a man in Cavafy's position: he can celebrate a body like Endymion's with an apparently detached scholarly aestheticism, without having to directly vocalize 'the love that dare not speak its name'. 84 'Before the statue of Endymion' presents an archaized poetic ego for Cavafy, 'remembering' a Hellenistic body through the lens of hedonalgia, but far more common is the poem which imports the aesthetics of classical sculpture into Cavafy's contemporary Alexandria. As an example, I discuss 'At the café door': Τὴν προσοχή μου κάτι ποῦ εἶπαν πλάγι μου διεύθυνε στοῦ καφενείου τὴν εἴσοδο. Κ' εἶδα τ' ὡραῖο σῶμα ποῦ ἔμοιαζε σὰν ἀπ' τὴν ἄκρα πεῖρα του νὰ τὤκαμεν ὁ Ἔρωςπλάττοντας τὰ συμμετρικά του μέλη μὲ χαρά· ὑψώνοντας γλυπτὸ τὸ ἀνάστημα· πλάττοντας μὲ συγκίνησι τὸ πρόσωπο κι ἀφίνοντας ἀπ' τῶν χειρῶν του τὸ ἄγγιγμα ἕνα αἴσθημα στὸ μέτωπο, στὰ μάτια, καὶ στὰ χείλη.
Something they said beside me made me look toward the café door, and I saw that lovely body which seemed as though Eros in his mastery had fashioned it, joyfully moulding its well-formed limbs, raising the statue to its sculpted height, moulding its face tenderly, and leaving, with a touch of the fingers, a particular nuance on the brow, the eyes, the lips.

[Italics denote my alterations to Keeley & Sherrard's translation]
The poem is rich in sculptural lexis, with the present participle πλάττοντας ('moulding') twice repeated emphatically to reinforce this theming (5, 7). 85 However, the poem differs dramatically from 'Before the statue of Endymion': unlike Endymion, the unnamed boy is alive, not petrified, and lives in Cavafy's contemporary Alexandria, not the mythic Greek past; the encounter is chance, not predicated on extensive premeditated preparation, and the somewhat elusive sensuality of Endymion's marble is solidified in the boy's flesh. The unnamed beloved of this poem is subjected to an almost pornographic gaze, 86 which parses the youth's body limb-by-limb as a series of erotic body parts: torso, arms, face, brow, eyes, lips. 87 The transformation of flesh into image fixes the young man as a series of snapshots: vitally dynamic but motionless like a statue. The stillness of these snapshots renders them as discrete moments accessible to the poet when re-examining the hedonalgic landscape of his poetic, sculpted memory.
Unlike the spectre of Kaisarion which Cavafy calls up in the eponymous poem, in 'At the café door', the role of sculptor is played not by the narrator, but by the boy-god of love, Eros. Significantly, the antique deity is not the feminine love-god 1 3 Bodies Out of Time: Sculpting Queer Poetics and Queering… Aphrodite, but the male Eros, a god who often facilitates the queering of a scene. 88 As Gutzwiller elucidates, Cavafy was familiar with the Hellenistic epigrammatist Meleager, which is especially apparent in both poets' utilization of Eros as a queering sculptural topos. 89 Meleager's poetry overtly references Eros as the sculptor of a beautiful ephebic youth, using vocabulary akin to Cavafy's:
Praxiteles the sculptor made a statue of Eros from Parian marble, moulding the child of Aphrodite, but now the most beautiful of the gods-Eros-sculpted an animate statue of Praxiteles, having sculpted himself; so that one amid mortals and the other amid immortals might preside over love, and so that Loves may respectively bear sceptres on earth as in heaven. Most blessed is the holy city of the Meropes, which reared a new Eros, son of a god, to be ruler of the young men. 90 Cavafy is here reordering and resituating a Hellenistic motif into his world; he develops the theme of Eros-as-sculptor and makes him the metaphorical sculptor of 'At the café door', raised to the level of simile by ἔμοιαζε ('seemed'). As the metaphor blossoms out, Cavafy himself becomes both the love-god and Praxiteles, as he sculpts Eros into his poem and is simultaneously emotionally sculpted by his queer desire. Such ideas are present throughout the corpus, for instance, in 'Days of 1896', the man described in the poem is an 'ἁπλὸ καὶ γνήσιο / τοῦ ἔρωτος παιδί' ('simple and trueborn child of Eros' [my translation]; 16-17), 91 evoking the same sense of Eros's progenitive and artistic power to create. 92 The ancient world, especially its statuary, provides a source from which Cavafy creates his own, queer artscape. The plundering of the ancient world is described programmatically in 'I've looked so much…': Τὴν ἐμορφιὰ ἔτσι πολὺ ἀτένισα ποῦ πλήρης εἶναι αὐτῆς ἡ ὅρασίς μου. Γραμμὲς τοῦ σώματος. Κόκκινα χείλη. Μέλη ἡδονικά. Μαλλιὰ σὰν ἀπὸ ἀγάλματα ἑλληνικὰ παρμένα· πάντα ἔμορφα, κι ἀχτένιστα σὰν εἶναι, καὶ πέφτουν, λίγο, ἐπάνω στ' ἄσπρα μέτωπα. Πρόσωπα τῆς ἀγάπης, ὅπως τά 'θελεν ἡ ποίησίς μου … μὲς στὲς νύχτες τῆς νεότητός μου, μέσα στὲς νύχτες μου, κρυφά, συναντημένα … I've looked on beauty so much that my vision overflows with it. The body's lines. Red lips. Sensual limbs. Hair as though stolen from Greek statues, always lovely, even uncombed, and falling slightly over pale foreheads. Figures of love, as my poetry desired them …. in the nights when I was young, encountered secretly in those nights Like 'At the café door', this poem's beloved is a figure sculpted out by Cavafy's queer poetics. The boy's beauty is παρμένα ('stolen') from Hellenic sculptures, and the young man's body is a harmonized amalgam of the prima facie opposing states of fleshly sensuality and carved perfection. The boy's limbs are sculpted ὅπως τά 'θελεν / ἡ ποίησίς μου ('as my poetry desired them'), an idealized reification of the poetic persona's desires which dances on the threshold between eternal art and sensual, haptic flesh. Of all his poems, this best demonstrates how Cavafy's queer poetics of reception operate in his poetry. The boy is an ideal, without the reifying forces of biography and biology. He is romanticized as the embodiment of that ancient form of love which Cavafy recognized as unacceptable in the world in which 91 Cavafy, like the ancient Greeks, plays on the flexibility of the Greek language: although Cavafy clearly wrote ἔρωτος in miniscule in the autograph manuscript (F2, φ15), therefore strictly meaning 'love', simply by capitalizing the epsilon, he could have written Ἔρωτος, making the connection to the god of love explicit. Such linguistic polyvalence compels us to detect plays whenever Cavafy uses apparently conceptual words, like ἔρως. 92 The created aspect of Cavafian ephebes is highlighted by the sorts of epithets often ascribed to them by the poet: τέλειος ('completed'), ποιητικός ('poetic', but playing on its root in ancient Greek's ποιέω, 'to make', we may detect some flavours of 'constructed'), ἰδανικός and ἰδεώδης ('ideal'). As Mackridge says, these adjectives cast Cavafy's beloveds 'as though they were already an artistic representation: a statue or a painting that has transcended the specific features of its individual model and transfigured it into an ideal embodiment of aesthetic beauty and sexual desire' (Hirst and Mackridge, C. P. Cavafy [n. 5 above], p. xxii). Also noteworthy are the ubiquitous ἐμορφιά ('beauty') and its cognates, which draw on their origin in μορφή ('shape/form/outline') to connote sculpted outlines and shaped aspects of plastic art. he lived. Cavafy's is not a unique story; sculpture has been used since Winckelmann as a vehicle to negotiate ideas of queerness, 93 and as Funke and Grove argue: Because of statuary's power to disrupt present-day ideals and values around gender and sexuality and elicit a strong physical and erotic response, it has often served to develop queer possibilities. 94 It is so with Cavafy. For him, reappropriation of ancient Greek homoerotics in finde-siècle Alexandria represents a reconnection with his Greek heritage and inheritance-not an inheritance focused on ethical or artistic greatness (as it had been for so many others), 95 but one derived from a shared queer sensibility.
To conclude, for Cavafy's poetics, sculpture is integral for the topics which it allows him to address. Statues are everywhere in Cavafy: they prominently feature as homoerotic symbols in his poetry but, more profoundly, they are also the mode through which he mediates his reception and rearticulation of ancient Greek desire. Sculpture forms an object of negotiation-on literal and poetic levels-through which Cavafy distils modern Greek queerness. Through his queer poetics, the poet-as-sculptor mines the marble of the classical past and re-sculpts it into the poetry of the twentieth century, reorienting both content and mode as queer. Thus, he is able to destabilize, or at least rearticulate, the meaning of classical sculpture for his own poetic identity formation, simultaneously rendering his poetry, poetics and persona as queer. Forster tells us that Cavafy stood, statue-like, 'absolutely motionless at a slight angle to the universe'. From this stance Cavafy gazes at a present in which those 'made like him' find little foothold; he conceives of a mode which is 'attentive to the past for the purposes of critiquing [this] present', 96 and with this, he sculpts his queer poetics.
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