The Anactoria Poem

Sappho

Translated by Jim Powell
 
Some say thronging cavalry, some say foot soldiers,
others call a fleet the most beautiful of
sights the dark earth offers, but I say it's what-
            ever you love best.
And it's easy to make this understood by
everyone, for she who surpassed all human
kind in beauty, Helen, abandoning her
            husband--that best of
men--went sailing off to the shores of Troy and
never spent a thought on her child or loving
parents: when the goddess seduced her wits and
            left her to wander,
she forgot them all, she could not remember
anything but longing, and lightly straying
aside, lost her way. But that reminds me
            now: Anactória,
she's not here, and I'd rather see her lovely
step, her sparkling glance and her face than gaze on
all the troops in Lydia in their chariots and
            glittering armor.
 
From The Poetry of Sappho (Oxford University Press 2007), translated by Jim Powell. Copyright © 2007 by Jim Powell. Reprinted by permission of the author.

Poems by This Author

Epithalamium, [Happy Bridegroom] by Sappho
Happy bridegroom, Hesper brings
The Anactoria Poem by Sappho
Some there are who say that the fairest thing seen
[Artfully adorned Aphrodite] by Sappho
[In my eyes he matches the gods] by Sappho
In my eyes he matches the gods, that man who
[Like the very gods] by Sappho
Like the very gods in my sight is he who


Further Reading

Related Poems
A Thousand Martyrs I Have Made
by Aphra Behn
Sappho and Phaon: Sonnet III
by Mary Robinson
The Anactoria Poem
by Sappho