The Project Gutenberg eBook of English Poems, Volume 02 (of 2) This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook. Title: English Poems, Volume 02 (of 2) Author: Fernando Pessoa Release date: August 11, 2021 [eBook #66040] Most recently updated: October 18, 2024 Language: English Credits: Laura Natal Rodrigues at Free Literature (Images generously made available by Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal.) *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLISH POEMS, VOLUME 02 (OF 2) *** ENGLISH POEMS BY FERNANDO PESSOA III EPITHALAMIUM LISBON «OLISIPO», APARTADO 145 1921 III EPITHALAMIUM I Set ope all shutters, that the day come in Like a sea or a din! Let not a nook of useless shade compel Thoughts of the night, or tell The mind's comparing that some things are sad, For this day all are glad! 'Tis morn, 'tis open morn, the full sun is Risen from out the abyss Where last night lay beyond the unseen rim Of the horizon dim. Now is the bride awaking. Lo! she starts To feel the day is home Whose too-near night will put two different hearts To beat as near as flesh can let them come. Guess how she joys in her feared going, nor opes Her eyes for fear of fearing at her joy. Now is the pained arrival of all hopes. With the half-thought she scarce knows how to toy. Oh, let her wait a moment or a day And prepare for the fray For which her thoughts not ever quite prepare! With the real day's arrival she's half wroth. Though she wish what she wants, she yet doth stay. Her dreams yet merged are In the slow verge of sleep, which idly doth The accurate hope of things remotely mar. II Part from the windows the small curtains set Sight more than light to omit! Look on the general fields, how bright they lie Under the broad blue sky, Cloudless, and the beginning of the heat Does the sight half ill-treat! The bride hath wakened. Lo! she feels her shaking Heart better all her waking! Her breasts are with fear's coldness inward clutched And more felt on her grown, That will by hands other than hers be touched And will find lips sucking their budded crown. Lo! the thought of the bridegroom's hands already Feels her about where even her hands are shy, And her thoughts shrink till they become unready. She gathers up her body and still doth lie. She vaguely lets her eyes feel opening. In a fringed mist each thing Looms, and the present day is truly clear But to her sense of fear. Like a hue, light lies on her lidded sight, And she half hates the inevitable light. III Open the windows and the doors all wide Lest aught of night abide, Or, like a ship's trail in the sea, survive What made it there to live! She lies in bed half waiting that her wish Grow bolder or more rich To make her rise, or poorer, to oust fear, And she rise as a common day were here. That she would be a bride in bed with man The parts where she is woman do insist And send up messages that shame doth ban From being dreamed but in a shapeless mist. She opes her eyes, the ceiling sees above Shutting the small alcove, And thinks, till she must shut her eyes again, Another ceiling she this night will know, Another house, another bed, she lain In a way she half guesses; so She shuts her eyes to see not the room she Soon will no longer see. IV Let the wide light come through the whole house now Like a herald with brow Garlanded round with roses and those leaves That love for its love weaves! Between her and the ceiling this day's ending A man's weight will be bending. Lo! with the thought her legs she twines, well knowing A hand will part them then; Fearing that entering in her, that allowing That will make softness begin rude at pain. If ye, glad sunbeams, are inhabited By sprites or gnomes that dally with the day, Whisper her, if she shrink that she'll be bled, That love's large bower is doored in this small way. V Now will her grave of untorn maidenhood Be dug in her small blood. Assemble ye at that glad funeral And weave her scarlet pall, O pinings for the flesh of man that often Did her secret hours soften And take her willing and unwilling hand Where pleasure starteth up. Come forth, ye moted gnomes, unruly band, That come so quick ye spill your brimming cup; Ye that make youth young and flesh nice And the glad spring and summer sun arise; Ye by whose secret presence the trees grow Green, and the flowers bud, and birds sing free, When with the fury of a trembling glow The bull climbs on the heifer mightily! VI Sing at her window, ye heard early wings In whose song joy's self sings! Buzz in her room along her loss of sleep, O small flies, tumble and creep Along the counterpane and on her fingers In mating pairs. She lingers. Along her joined-felt legs a prophecy Creeps like an inward hand. Look how she tarries! Tell her: fear not glee! Come up! Awake! Dress for undressing! Stand! Look how the sun is altogether all! Life hums around her senses petalled close. Come up! Come up! Pleasure must thee befall! Joy to be plucked, O yet ungathered rose! VII Now is she risen. Look how she looks down, After her slow down-slid night-gown, On her unspotted while of nakedness Save where the beast's difference from her white frame Hairily triangling black below doth shame Her to-day's sight of it, till the caress Of the chemise cover her body. Dress! Stop not, sitting upon the bed's hard edge, Stop not to wonder at by-and-bye, nor guess! List to the rapid birds i'th' window ledge! Up, up and washed! Lo! she is up half-gowned, For she lacks hands to have power to button fit The white symbolic wearing, and she's found By her maids thus, that come to perfect it. VIII Look how over her seeing-them-not her maids Smile at each other their same thought of her! Already is she deflowered in others' thoughts. With curious carefulness of inlocked braids, With hands that in the sun minutely stir, One works her hair into concerted knots. Another buttons tight the gown; her hand, Touching the body's warmth of life, doth band Her thoughts with the rude bridegroom's hand to be. The first then, on the veil placed mistily, Lays on her head, her own head sideways leaning, The garland soon to have no meaning. The other, at her knees, makes the white shoon Fit close the trembling feet, and her eyes see The stockinged leg, road upwards to that boon Where all this day centres its revelry. IX Now is she gowned completely, her face won To a flush. Look how the sun Shines hot and how the creeper, loosed, doth strain To hit the heated pane! She is all white, all she's awaiting him. Her eyes are bright and dim. Her hands are cold, her lips are dry, her heart Pants like a pursued hart. X Now is she issued. List how all speech pines Then bursts into a wave of speech again! Now is she issued out to where the guests Look on her daring not to look at them. The hot sun outside shines. A sweaty oiliness of hot life rests On the day's face this hour. A mad joy's pent in each warm thing's hushed power. XI Hang with festoons and wreaths and coronals The corridors and halls! Be there all round the sound of gay bells ringing! Let there be echoing singing! Pour out like a libation all your joy! Shout, even ye children, little maid and boy Whose belly yet unfurred yet whitely decks A sexless thing of sex! Shout out as if ye knew what joy this is You clap at in such bliss! XII This is the month and this the day. Ye must not stay. Sally ye out and in warm clusters move To where beyond the trees the belfry's height Does in the blue wide heaven a message prove, Somewhat calm, of delight. Now flushed and whispering loud sally ye out To church! The sun pours on the ordered rout, And all their following eyes clasp round the bride: They feel like hands her bosom and her side; Like the inside of the vestment next her skin, They round her round and fold each crevice in; They lift her skirts up, as to tease or woo The cleft hid thing below; And this they think at her peeps in their ways And in their glances plays. XIII No more, no more of church or feast, for these Are outward to the day, like the green trees That flank the road to church and the same road Back from the church, under a higher sun trod. These have no more part than a floor or wall In the great day's true ceremonial. The guests themselves, no less than they that wed, Hold these as nought but corridors to bed. So are all things, that between this and dark Will be passed, a dim work Of minutes, hours seen in a sleep, and dreamed Untimed and wrongly deemed. The bridal and the walk back and the feast Are all for each a mist Where he sees others through a blurred hot notion Of drunk and veined emotion, And a red race runs through his seeing and hearing, A great carouse of dreams seen each on each, Till their importunate careering A stopped, half-hurting point of mad joy reach. XIV The bridegroom aches for the end of this and lusts To know those paps in sucking gusts, To put his first hand on that belly's hair And feel for the lipped lair, The fortress made but to be taken, for which He feels the battering ram grow large and itch. The trembling glad bride feels all the day hot On that still cloistered spot Where only her nightly maiden hand did feign A pleasure's empty gain. And, of the others, most will whisper at this, Knowing the spurt it is; And children yet, that watch with looking eyes, Will now thrill to be wise In flesh, and with big men and women act The liquid tickling fact For whose taste they'll in secret corners try They scarce know what still dry. XV Even ye, now old, that to this come as to Your past, your own joy throw Into the cup, and with the younger drink That which now makes you think Of what love was when love was. (For not now Your winter thoughts allow). Drink with the hot day, the bride's sad joy and The bridegroom's haste inreined, The memory of that day when ye were young And, with great paeans sung Along the surface of the depths of you, You paired and the night saw The day come in and you did still pant close, And still the half-fallen flesh distending rose. XVI No matter now or past or future. Be Lovers' age in your glee! Give all your thoughts to this great muscled day That like a courser tears The bit of Time, to make night come and say The maiden mount now her first rider bears! Flesh pinched, flesh bit, flesh sucked, flesh girt around, Flesh crushed and ground, These things inflame your thoughts and make ye dim In what ye say or seem! Rage out in naked glances till ye fright Your ague of delight, In glances seeming clothes and thoughts to hate That fleshes separate! Stretch out your limbs to the warm day outside, To feel it while it bide! For the strong sun, the hot ground, the green grass, Each far lake's dazzling glass, And each one's flushed thought of the night to be Are all one joy-hot unity. XVII In a red bacchic surge of thoughts that beat On the mad temples like an ire's amaze, In a fury that hurts the eyes, and yet Doth make all things clear with a blur around, The whole group's soul like a glad drunkard sways And bounds up from the ground! Ay, though all these be common people heaping To church, from church, the bridal keeping, Yet all the satyrs and big pagan haunches That in taut flesh delight and teats and paunches, And whose course, trailing through the foliage, nears The crouched nymph that half fears, In invisible rush, behind, before This decent group move, and with hot thoughts store The passive souls round which their mesh they wind, The while their rout, loud stumbling as if blind, Makes the hilled earth wake echoing from her sleep To the lust in their leap. XVIII Io! Io! There runs a juice of pleasure's rage Through these frames' mesh, That now do really ache to strip and wage Upon each others' flesh The war that fills the womb and puts milk in The teats a man did win, The battle fought with rage to join and fit And not to hurt or hit! Io! Io! Be drunken like the day and hour! Shout, laugh and overpower With clamour your own thoughts, lest they a breath Utter of age or death! Now is all absolute youth, and the small pains That thrill the filled veins Themselves are edged in a great tickling joy That halts ever ere it cloy. Put out of mind all things save flesh and giving The male milk that makes living! Rake out great peals of joy like grass from ground In your o'ergrown soul found! Make your great rut dispersedly rejoice With laugh or voice, As if all earth, hot sky and tremulous air A mighty cymbal were! XIX Set the great Flemish hour aflame! Your senses of all leisure maim! Cast down with blows that joy even where they hurt The hands that mock to avert! All things pick up to bed that lead ye to Be naked that ye woo! Tear up, pluck up, like earth who treasure seek, When the chest's ring doth peep, The thoughts that cover thoughts of the acts of heat This great day does intreat! Now seem all hands pressing the paps as if They meant them juice to give! Now seem all things pairing on one another, Hard flesh soft flesh to smother, And hairy legs and buttocks balled to split White legs mid which they shift. Yet these mixed mere thoughts in each mind but speak The day's push love to wreak, The man's ache to have felt possession, The woman's man to have on, The abstract surge of life clearly to reach The bodies' concrete beach. Yet some work of this doth the real day don. Now are skirts lifted in the servants' hall, And the whored belly's stall Ope to the horse that enters in a rush, Half late, too near the gush. And even now doth an elder guest emmesh A flushed young girl in a dark nook apart, And leads her slow to move his produced flesh. Look how she likes with something in her heart To feel her hand work the protruded dart! XX But these are thoughts or promises or but Half the purpose of rut, And this is lust thought-of or futureless Or used but lust to ease. Do ye the circle true of love pretend, And, what Nature, intend! Do ye actually ache The horse of lust by reins of life to bend And pair in love for love's creating sake! Bellow! Roar! Stallions be or bulls that fret On their seed's hole to get! Surge for that carnal complement that will Your flesh's young juice thrill To the wet mortised joints at which you meet The coming life to greet, In the tilled womb that will bulge till it do The plenteous curve of spheric earth renew! XXI And ye, that wed to-day, guess these instincts Of the concerted group in hints Yourselves from Nature naturally have, And your good future brave! Close lips, nude arms, felt breasts and organ mighty, Do your joy's night work rightly! Teach them these things, O day of pomp of heat! Leave them in thoughts such as must make the feat Of flesh inevitable and natural as Pissing when wish doth press! Let them cling, kiss and fit Together with natural wit, And let the night, coming, teach them that use For youth is in abuse! Let them repeat the link, and pour and pour Their pleasure till they can no more! Ay, let the night watch over their repeated Coupling in darkness, till thought's self, o'erheated, Do fret and trouble, and sleep come on hurt frames, And, mouthing each one's names, They in each other's arms dream still of love And something of it prove! And, if they wake, teach them to recommence, For an hour was far hence; Till their contacted flesh, in heat o'erblent With joy, sleep sick, while, spent The stars, the sky pale in the East and shiver Where light the night doth sever, And with clamour of joy and life's young din The warm new day come in. LISBON, 1913. *** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLISH POEMS, VOLUME 02 (OF 2) *** Updated editions will replace the previous one—the old editions will be renamed. 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