1 min read
Слушать(AI)Sonnet VIII
How many masks wear we, and undermasks,
Upon our countenance of soul, and when,
If for self-sport the soul itself unmasks,
Knows it the last mask off and the face plain?
The true mask feels no inside to the
But looks out of the mask by co-masked eyes.
Whatever consciousness begins the
The task's accepted use to sleepness ties.
Like a child frighted by its mirrored faces,
Our souls, that children are, being thought-losing,
Foist otherness upon their seen
And get a whole world on their forgot causing; And, when a thought would unmask our soul's masking, Itself goes not unmasked to the unmasking.
Fernando Pessoa
Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa (13 June 1888 – 30 November 1935) was a Portuguese poet, writer, literary critic, translator, publisher and phi
Comments
You need to be signed in to write comments
Other author posts
This
They say I pretend or All I write No such thing It simply is that
Sonnet III
When I do think my meanest line shall More in Time's use than my creating whole, That future eyes more clearly shall feel In this inked page than in my direct soul;
If After I Die
If, after I die, they should want to write my biography, There's nothing simpler I've just two dates - of my birth, and of my death In between the one thing and the other all the days aremine
Sonnet XXX
I do not know what truth the false Of this sad sense of the seen world may own, Or if this flowered plant bears also a Unto the true reality unknown