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A Little Larger Than the Entire Universe

Page 21

by Fernando Pessoa


  Suddenly someone shakes this twofold hour as if in a sieve,

  And the powder of the two realities, mixed together, falls

  On my hands full of drawings of ports

  Where huge sailing ships are casting off with no intention of

  returning . . .

  Powder of white and black gold on my fingers . . .

  My hands are the steps of that girl leaving the fair,

  Alone and contented like this day . . .

  [1914]

  She sings, poor reaper, perhaps

  Believing herself to be happy.

  She sings, she reaps, and her voice,

  Full of glad and anonymous poverty,

  Wavers like the song of a bird

  In the air as clean as a doorstep,

  And there are curves in the soft tissue

  Of the sound her song is weaving.

  Hearing her brings joy and sadness,

  The field and its toil are in her voice,

  And she sings as if she had

  More reasons than life for singing.

  Ah, sing, sing for no reason!

  In me what feels is always

  Thinning. Pour into my heart

  Your waving, uncertain voice!

  Ah, to be you while being I!

  To have your glad unconsciousness

  And be conscious of it! O sky!

  O field! O song! Knowledge

  Is so heavy and life so brief!

  Enter inside me! Make

  My soul your weightless shadow!

  And take me with you, away!

  [1914]

  SOME RANDOM VERSES

  Live with nostalgia for the moment

  Even as you live it . . .

  We’re empty boats, blown forward

  Like loose strands of hair

  By a long and steady wind, living

  Without knowing what we feel or want . . .

  Let’s make ourselves aware of this

  As of a still pond

  In the midst of a torpid landscape

  Under a desolate sky,

  And may our self-awareness

  No longer be roused by desire . . .

  In this way, equal to the whole hour

  In all its sweetness,

  Our life, no longer us, will be

  Our pre-wedding: a color,

  A fragrance, a swaying of trees,

  And death won’t come early or late . . .

  What matters is that nothing matter

  Anymore . . . Whether Fate

  Hangs over us or quietly and obscurely

  Lurks in the distance

  Is all the same . . . Here’s the moment . . .

  Let’s be it . . . What good is thinking?

  11 OCTOBER 1914

  PASSERBY

  I hear a piano playing, and laughter

  Behind the music. I pause

  In my dreaming to look up: it’s from

  The tall building—third floor.

  So much joy in those young voices!

  It’s false? How do I know?

  Their pleasure makes me shiver with envy!

  It’s banal? I have none.

  They may be happy on the third floor

  Of that tall building. I

  Pass by, dreaming of that home as if

  Dreaming of another country.

  24 JUNE 1915

  DIARY IN THE SHADE

  Do you still remember me?

  You knew me a long time ago.

  I was that sad child you didn’t care for

  But then gradually got to be interested in

  (In his anguish, his sadness, and something else)

  And ended up liking, almost without realizing it.

  Remember? The sad Child who played on the beach

  By himself, quietly, far away from the others,

  And he sometimes looked over at them sadly but without

  regret . . .

  I see that you occasionally steal a glance at me.

  Do you remember? Do you want to see if you remember? Ah,

  I understand . . .

  Don’t you still sense in my sad and calm face

  The sad child who always played far away from the others

  And sometimes looked at them with sad eyes but without

  regret?

  I know you’re watching and don’t understand what sadness

  it is

  That makes me look sad.

  It isn’t regret or nostalgia, disappointment or resentment.

  No . . . It’s the sadness

  Of one who, in the great prenatal realm,

  Must have received from God the Secret—

  The secret of the world’s illusion,

  Of the absolute emptiness of things—

  The incurable sadness

  Of one who realizes that everything’s pointless, worthless,

  That effort is an absurd waste,

  And that life is a void,

  Since disillusion always follows on the heels of illusion

  And Death seems to be the meaning of Life . . .

  It’s this, but not only this, that you see in my face

  And that makes you steal an occasional glance at me.

  There is, besides this,

  That grim astonishment, that black chill,

  Which comes from the soul

  Having been told a secret of God

  In the prenatal realm, when life

  Had still shown no sign of dawning

  And the whole of the complex, luminous Universe

  Was an inevitable destiny yet to be fulfilled.

  If this doesn’t define me, nothing defines me.

  And this doesn’t define me—

  Because the Secret that God told me wasn’t only this.

  There was something else, which led to my embracing

  The unreal dimension, my delighting in it so much, my knack

  For grasping the ungraspable and for feeling what can’t be

  felt,

  My inward dignity of an emperor, though I have no empire,

  My world of dreams fashioned in broad daylight . . .

  Yes, that is what gives

  My face an oldness even older than my childhood,

  And my gaze an anxiety within my happiness.

  You occasionally steal a glance at me,

  And you don’t understand me,

  And you steal another glance, and another, and another . . .

  Without God there’s nothing but life

  And you’ll never be able to understand . . .

  17 SEPTEMBER 1916

  A piano on my street . . .

  Children playing outside . . .

  A Sunday, and the sun

  Shining golden with joy . . .

  My sorrow that makes me

  Love all that’s indefinite . . .

  Though I had little in life,

  It pains me to have lost it.

  But my life already

  Runs deep in changes . . .

  A piano I miss hearing,

  Those children I miss being!

  25 FEBRUARY 1917

  Where’s my life going, and who’s taking it there?

  Why do I always do what I didn’t want to do?

  What destiny in me keeps on marching in the darkness?

  What part of me that I don’t know is my guide?

  My destiny has a direction and a method,

  My life adheres to a path and a scale,

  But my self-awareness is the sketchy outline

  Of what I do and am; it isn’t me.

  I don’t even know myself in what I knowingly do.

  I never reach the end of what I do with an end in mind.

  The pleasure or pain I embrace isn’t what it really is.

  I move on, but there’s no I inside me that moves.

  Who am I, Lord, in your darkness and your smoke?

  What soul besides mine inhabits my soul?

  Why did
you give me the feeling of a path

  If the path I seek I’m not seeking, if in me nothing walks

  Except through an effort in my steps that’s not mine,

  Except by a fate hidden from me in my acts?

  Why am I conscious if consciousness is an illusion?

  What am I between “what” and the facts?

  Close my eyes, obscure my soul’s vision!

  O illusions! Since I know nothing about myself or life,

  May I enjoy at least that nothing, without faith

  but calmly,

  May I at least sleep through living, like a forgotten

  beach . . .

  5 JUNE 1917

  Ah! the anguish, the vile rage, the despair

  Of not being able to express

  With a shout, an extreme and bitter shout,

  The bleeding of my heart!

  I speak, and the words I say are mere sound.

  I suffer, and it’s just me.

  Ah! If I could only wrest from music the secret

  Timbre of its shout!

  What rage that my sorrow can’t even shout,

  That its shout goes no farther

  Than the silence, which returns, in the air

  Of the night filled with nothing!

  15 JANUARY 1920

  NON NECESSE EST

  It’s a stage—a stage in a dream—

  Where the actors have nothing to do.

  There a smiling destiny

  Fuses dreaming with being.

  Dreamed scenery, deceive him!

  Action, don’t take place!

  Fool the one who made you,

  O fictions of the interlude!

  And may the soul live in ethereal

  Detachment, forgetting about life,

  Which is womanish and plebeian,

  And death, which isn’t anything!

  [1921?]

  Whoever, horizon, passes beyond you

  Passes from view, not from living or being.

  Don’t call the soul dead when it flies away.

  Say: It vanished out there in the sea.

  Be for us, sea, the symbol of all life—

  Uncertain, unchanging, and more than our seeing!

  Once Earth makes its circle and death its journey,

  The ship and the soul will reappear.

  11 JANUARY 1922

  NOTHING

  Ah, the soft, soft playing,

  Like someone about to cry,

  Of a song that’s woven

  Out of artifice and moonlight . . .

  Nothing to make us remember

  Life.

  A prelude of courtesies

  Or a smile that faded . . .

  A cold garden in the distance . . .

  And in the soul that finds it,

  Just the absurd echo of its empty

  Flight.

  8 NOVEMBER 1922

  I don’t know who I am right now. I dream.

  Steeped in feeling myself, I sleep. In this

  Calm hour my thought forgets its thinking,

  My soul has no soul.

  If I exist, it’s wrong to know it. If I

  Wake up, I feel I’m mistaken. I just don’t know.

  There’s nothing I want, have, or remember.

  I have no being or law.

  A moment of consciousness between illusions,

  I’m bounded all around by phantoms.

  Sleep on, oblivious to other people’s hearts,

  O heart belonging to no one!

  6 JANUARY 1923

  I hear the wind blowing in the night.

  I sense, high up in the air, the whip

  Of I don’t know whom hitting I don’t know what.

  Everything’s heard; nothing’s seen.

  Ah, everything is symbol and analogy.

  The wind that blows and this cold night

  Are something other than night and wind—

  They’re shadows of Being and of Thought.

  Things tell us through stories what they don’t say.

  I don’t know what drama I ruined by thinking—

  A drama the night and the wind were telling.

  I heard it. Thinking of it, I heard in vain.

  Everything softly hums, the same.

  The wind stops blowing, the night advances,

  Day begins and I exist, anonymous.

  But what happened was much more than this.

  24 SEPTEMBER 1923

  THE SCAFFOLD

  The time I’ve spent dreaming—

  Years and years of my life!

  Ah, how much of my past

  Was only the false life

  Of a future I imagined!

  Here on the bank of the river

  I grow calm for no reason.

  Its empty flowing mirrors,

  Cold and anonymous,

  The life I’ve lived in vain.

  How little hope ever attains!

  What longing is worth the wait?

  Any child’s ball

  Rises higher than my hope,

  Rolls farther than my longing.

  Waves of the river, so slight

  That you aren’t even waves,

  The hours, days and years

  Pass quickly—mere grass or snow

  Which die by the same sun.

  I spent all I didn’t have.

  I’m older than I am.

  The illusion that kept me going

  Was a queen only on stage:

  Once undressed, her reign was over.

  Soft sound of these slow waters

  Aching for shores you’ve passed,

  How drowsy are the memories

  Of misty hopes! What dreams

  All dreaming and life amount to!

  What did I make of my life?

  I found myself when already lost.

  Impatient, I let myself be,

  As I might let a lunatic go on

  Believing what I’d proved was wrong.

  Dead sound of these gentle waters

  That flow because they must,

  Take not only my memories

  But also my dead hopes—

  Dead, because they must die.

  I’m already my future corpse.

  Only a dream links me to myself—

  The hazy and belated dream

  Of what I should have been—a wall

  Around my abandoned garden.

  Take me, passing waves,

  To the oblivion of the sea!

  Bequeath me to what I won’t be—

  I, who raised a scaffold

  Around the house I never built.

  29 AUGUST 1924

  GLOSSES

  I.

  Every work is in every way futile.

  The futile wind, stirring up futile leaves,

  Describes our effort and our general state.

  Given or achieved, everything is Fate.

  Calmly observe, above your own self,

  Lonely and infinite Possibility,

  Which uselessly gives rise to what’s real.

  Hush and, unless it’s to think, don’t feel.

  2.

  Neither good nor evil defines the world.

  Oblivious to both, the Fate we call God

  From the heaven we suppose is “on high”

  Rules neither well nor badly earth and sky.

  We go through life laughing and crying,

  The one state being a contracted face,

  And the other some water with a little salt.

  Beyond good and evil, Fate decides all.

  3.

  The sun plies the sky’s twelve signs,

  Forever rising and forever dying

  In the horizons of what we see. Reality,

  As we know it, is where we happen to be.

  Fictions of our own consciousness,

  We’ve laid instinct and knowledge to rest.

  And the sun, unmoving, doesn’t even ply

  The twelve si
gns that aren’t in the sky.

  14 AUGUST 1925

  CHESS

  Pawns, they go out into the peaceful night,

  Tired and full of fictitious feelings.

  They’re going home, talking about nothing,

  Dressed in furs, coats and pelisses.

  As pawns, destiny only allows them

  One forward square per move, unless

  They’re given another one diagonally,

  On a new path, through someone else’s death.

  Eternal subjects of the noble pieces,

  Like the bishop or rook, that move far and fast,

  They’re suddenly overtaken by fate

  In their lonely march, and breathe their last.

  One or another, making it all the way,

  Redeems not his own but someone else’s life.

  And the game goes on, indifferent to each piece,

  The relentless hand moving them all alike.

  Then, poor creatures dressed in furs or silks,

 

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