Today’s
selection for National Poetry Month takes us to Chile. Or at least, it takes us
to a Chilean poet.
Ricardo
Eliécer Neftalí Reyes Basoalto is better known to us as Pablo Neruda, a
stunning cultural force of the 20th Century. Taking his pen name
from a Czech poet, Neruda served Chile as a politician and diplomat, all the
while writing furiously. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1971, and
died two years later (very possibly murdered by agents of the Pinochet regime).
He was
deeply affected by his time spent in Spain during the 1930s and wrote some very
powerful poems about the Spanish Civil War.
Neruda
felt that it was a poet’s job to be involved in everything. As he said in his
acceptance speech for the Nobel Prize, “A poet is at the same time a force for
solidarity and for solitude.”
Well.
I’m
sharing one of his sonnets with you.
Sonnet
LXVI
I do
not love you except because I love you;
I go
from loving to not loving you,
From
waiting to not waiting for you
My
heart moves from cold to fire.
I love
you only because it's you the one I love;
I hate
you deeply, and hating you
Bend
to you, and the measure of my changing love for you
Is
that I do not see you but love you blindly.
Maybe
January light will consume
My
heart with its cruel
Ray,
stealing my key to true calm.
In
this part of the story I am the one who
Dies,
the only one, and I will die of love because I love you,
Because
I love you, Love, in fire and blood.
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