Cauchy's Formula has a remarkable interpretation in terms of hyperbolic geometry.
To understand it, you need to know very little about hyperbolic geometry.
In fact, you only need to know that if you define the "plane" as the open unit disk $D$ in $\mathbb C$, and the "lines" as those arcs of circle inside $D$ which are orthogonal to the unit circle $\partial D$, you get a model for the hyperbolic plane.
[There is a first miracle: the orientation preserving isometries of $D$ into itself are precisely the holomorphic automorphisms of $D$.]
If $f$ is holomorphic in a neighborhood of the closure of $D$, and $z$ is in $D$, then Cauchy's Formula says that
$f(z)$ is the average of $f$ on $\partial D$ "as you see it from $z$".
By this I mean that $f(z)$ is the integral of $f$ on $\partial D$ with respect to the measure which assigns to an arc in $\partial D$ the number $\theta/2\pi$ where $\theta\in[0,2\pi]$ is the angle between the (hyperbolic) half-lines going from $z$ to the end points of the arc. (That's the measure you think the arc has, as a part of your horizon, if you look at it from $z$.)
EDIT 1 OF NOV 1, 2010.
This is to clarify the relationship between the Cauchy's and Poisson's Formulas.
For $|z|<1$ and $\theta$ real define the Cauchy kernel by
$$C(\theta,z):=\frac{1}{2\pi}\ \frac{e^{i\theta}}{e^{i\theta}-z}\quad,$$
and define the Cauchy transform of a continuous function $g$ on the unit circle $\partial D$ by
$$(Cg)(z):=\int_0^{2\pi}g(e^{i\theta})\ C(\theta,z)\ d\theta$$
for $|z|<1$. In particular Cauchy's Formula says that if $g$ is the boundary value of a holomorphic function $f$ on $D$, then $Cg=f$.
For $|z|<1$ and $\theta$ real define the Poisson kernel by
$$P(\theta,z):=C(\theta,z)+\overline{C(\theta,z)}-\frac{1}{2\pi}\quad,$$
and define the Poisson transform of a continuous function $g$ on the unit circle $\partial D$ by
$$(Pg)(z):=\int_0^{2\pi}g(e^{i\theta})\ P(\theta,z)\ d\theta$$
for $|z|<1$. In particular Poisson's Formula says that if $g$ is the boundary value of a harmonic function $f$ on $D$, then $Pg=f$.
EDIT 2 OF NOV 1, 2010. I stole this from Bill Thurston: go to page 180 of (or search for "visual" in) http://www.math.unl.edu/~mbrittenham2/classwk/990s08/public/thurston.notes.pdf/8a.pdf .
EDIT OF NOV 2, 2010.
Stricto sensu, there is no geometric interpretation of the Cauchy kernel, because it is not invariant.
Indeed, if $G$ denotes the group of biholomorphic transforms of the open unit disk $D$, then the Cauchy kernel $C(z,\theta)d\theta$, viewed as a 1-form on $D\times\partial D$, is not $G$-invariant.
However, its restriction to $\{0\}\times\partial D$ is invariant under the stabilizer of $0\in D$ in $G$ (which is the circle group).
As a result, this restriction extends in a unique way to a $G$-invariant 1-form on $D\times\partial D$, and this 1-form is the Poisson kernel.
More precisely, the (complex) vector space of $G$-invariant $(0,1)$-forms on $D\times\partial D$ is one dimensional, generated by the Poisson kernel. [This is because the action of $G$ on $D\times\partial D$ is simply transitive, and the $(0,1)$-forms on $D\times\partial D$ are the sections of a homogeneous line bundle over $D\times\partial D$.]