Fernando Pessoa
Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa, mais conhecido como Fernando Pessoa, foi um poeta, filósofo e escritor português. Fernando Pessoa é o mais universal poeta português.
1888-06-13 Lisboa, Portugal
1935-11-30 Lisboa
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SALUTE TO THE SUN’S ENTRY INTO ARIES
Now at the doorway of the coming year,
Ye nymphs do gather and the garlands twine
That heroes' sons will bear
Fifty years hence in their remembering hands
And of their fathers speak with shining eyes
And of the war that stained the lands.
Weave ye the garlands, for the fame will pass,
And their grandchildren of grandchildren will
No more remember, neither care
Who their ancestor was
Who did that old crown, now scarce a crown, bear
For all must pass, that Time may have his fill.
Weave ye the garlands therefore, for this hour
Will not survive beyond the memory
Of those yet near to it who have the power
The hour somewhat like what it was to see.
Weave ye the garlands, weave
That their memory may live
Awhile, and if that mean that fame is nought,
Weave still the garlands with a gentle thought,
For weaving them, know ye
What to Time's elder shades you yet may give.
The days are heavy with the blood of men,
The year reels like a shattered wall
When the wind comes out of the caves of night.
Our minds are equal with the shaking...
We know not on what power to call
Or which side of the Truth lies right.
Alas! alas! all sides are right in war,
And that impartial vision born of peace,
And that the Gods alone can have,
Lives only in our wish that dim wars mar,
Breathes only in the halls of our release
From all the human things for which we crave.
But these are thoughts, and life is grief and fear.
Weave ye the garlands, lest the coming year
Forget, like ye, the fallen to remember
And the victors to greet.
Weave ye the garlands made
Of some strange flower that lasts unto December
And lay them at Fate's unseen feet.
Ay, for not for the heroes nor the slain
Weave ye the garlands woven with your pain.
Not for the fallen do your cheeks awhile
Flush then grow pale and your proud pain smile.
Not for a man nor for a nation do
Your garlands outreach Time
Perhaps and in eternal regions chime
With the sense of their fame who were e'er true.
For Fate alone all garlands woven are.
Unto Fate's feet the rivers of our tears
Perennial run, nor is there aught more far
Alas! than mere Fate that outwits the sun,
And that in circles round its empty name
Carries the vain course of our sterile fame
And great men as great nations equal lead
Vainly around the frame
Of nothing, like a wind along a mead.
Yet, whether for some man or for no man,
Whether for personal hopes or Fate no one,
Your garlands weave, lest the year come und span
With days fame‑empty the task e'er begun.
Weave garlands, green glad garlands, garlands sad,
Garlands of all sorts, if they glory mean,
Carry your woven garlands to their grave...
The rest is something that cannot be had -
The void as of a ship sunk nor more seen
Beneath the wave.
Ye nymphs do gather and the garlands twine
That heroes' sons will bear
Fifty years hence in their remembering hands
And of their fathers speak with shining eyes
And of the war that stained the lands.
Weave ye the garlands, for the fame will pass,
And their grandchildren of grandchildren will
No more remember, neither care
Who their ancestor was
Who did that old crown, now scarce a crown, bear
For all must pass, that Time may have his fill.
Weave ye the garlands therefore, for this hour
Will not survive beyond the memory
Of those yet near to it who have the power
The hour somewhat like what it was to see.
Weave ye the garlands, weave
That their memory may live
Awhile, and if that mean that fame is nought,
Weave still the garlands with a gentle thought,
For weaving them, know ye
What to Time's elder shades you yet may give.
The days are heavy with the blood of men,
The year reels like a shattered wall
When the wind comes out of the caves of night.
Our minds are equal with the shaking...
We know not on what power to call
Or which side of the Truth lies right.
Alas! alas! all sides are right in war,
And that impartial vision born of peace,
And that the Gods alone can have,
Lives only in our wish that dim wars mar,
Breathes only in the halls of our release
From all the human things for which we crave.
But these are thoughts, and life is grief and fear.
Weave ye the garlands, lest the coming year
Forget, like ye, the fallen to remember
And the victors to greet.
Weave ye the garlands made
Of some strange flower that lasts unto December
And lay them at Fate's unseen feet.
Ay, for not for the heroes nor the slain
Weave ye the garlands woven with your pain.
Not for the fallen do your cheeks awhile
Flush then grow pale and your proud pain smile.
Not for a man nor for a nation do
Your garlands outreach Time
Perhaps and in eternal regions chime
With the sense of their fame who were e'er true.
For Fate alone all garlands woven are.
Unto Fate's feet the rivers of our tears
Perennial run, nor is there aught more far
Alas! than mere Fate that outwits the sun,
And that in circles round its empty name
Carries the vain course of our sterile fame
And great men as great nations equal lead
Vainly around the frame
Of nothing, like a wind along a mead.
Yet, whether for some man or for no man,
Whether for personal hopes or Fate no one,
Your garlands weave, lest the year come und span
With days fame‑empty the task e'er begun.
Weave garlands, green glad garlands, garlands sad,
Garlands of all sorts, if they glory mean,
Carry your woven garlands to their grave...
The rest is something that cannot be had -
The void as of a ship sunk nor more seen
Beneath the wave.
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