Passion for Solitude by Cesare Pavese
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작성자 admin 작성일15-07-22 16:29 조회820회 댓글0건본문
Passion for Solitude
I’m eating a little supper by
the bright window.
The room’s already dark, the
sky’s starting to turn.
Outside my door, the quiet
roads lead,
after a short walk, to open
fields.
I’m eating, watching the
sky—who knows
how many women are eating now.
My body is calm:
labor dulls all the senses,
and dulls women too.
Outside, after supper, the
stars will come out to touch
the wide plain of the earth.
The stars are alive,
but not worth these cherries,
which I’m eating alone.
I look at the sky, know that
lights already are shining
among rust-red roofs, noises
of people beneath them.
A gulp of my drink, and my
body can taste the life
of plants and of rivers. It
feels detached from things.
A small dose of silence
suffices, and everything’s still,
in its true place, just like
my body is still.
All things become islands
before my senses,
which accept them as a matter
of course: a murmur of silence.
All things in this darkness—I
can know all of them,
just as I know that blood
flows in my veins.
The plain is a great flowing
of water through plants,
a supper of all things. Each
plant, and each stone,
lives motionlessly. I hear my
food feeding my veins
with each living thing that
this plain provides.
The night doesn’t matter. The
square patch of sky
whispers all the loud noises
to me, and a small star
struggles in emptiness, far
from all foods,
from all houses, alien. It
isn’t enough for itself,
it needs too many companions.
Here in the dark, alone,
my body is calm, it feels it’s
in charge.
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