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<p>We ask questions to find out the facts, but what if you can’t trust the answers, the questions, or the person who's asking the questions? In Constantine P. Cavafy’s “Waiting for the Barbarians,” translated by Evan Jones, leaders exercise a sinister kind of violence — they’ve taken over people’s imaginations with showy displays of wealth and privilege, time-wasting ceremony, and fear coursing beneath it all.</p><p>Constantine P. Cavafy was a Greek-language poet born in Alexandria, Egypt, and he lived from 1863 to 1933. His poetry has been published in numerous collections, including <a href="https://onbeing.org/programs/constantine-p-cavafy-poems-as-teachers-episode-3/#media" target="_blank"><i>The Complete Poems of Cavafy</i></a>, <a href="https://onbeing.org/programs/constantine-p-cavafy-poems-as-teachers-episode-3/#media" target="_blank"><i>The Collected Poems</i></a><i>, </i>and<i> </i><a href="https://onbeing.org/programs/constantine-p-cavafy-poems-as-teachers-episode-3/#media" ...