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<h1>35 Sonnets</h1>
<h2 class="no-break">by Fernando Pessoa</h2>
<hr />
<h2>I.</h2>
<p>Whether we write or speak or do but look<br/>
We are ever unapparent. What we are<br/>
Cannot be transfused into word or book.<br/>
Our soul from us is infinitely far.<br/>
However much we give our thoughts the will<br/>
To be our soul and gesture it abroad,<br/>
Our hearts are incommunicable still.<br/>
In what we show ourselves we are ignored.<br/>
The abyss from soul to soul cannot be bridged<br/>
By any skill of thought or trick of seeming.<br/>
Unto our very selves we are abridged<br/>
When we would utter to our thought our being.<br/>
We are our dreams of ourselves, souls by gleams,<br/>
And each to each other dreams of others’ dreams.</p>
<h2>II.</h2>
<p>If that apparent part of life’s delight<br/>
Our tingled flesh-sense circumscribes were seen<br/>
By aught save reflex and co-carnal sight,<br/>
Joy, flesh and life might prove but a gross screen.<br/>
Haply Truth’s body is no eyable being,<br/>
Appearance even as appearance lies,<br/>
Haply our close, dark, vague, warm sense of seeing<br/>
Is the choked vision of blindfolded eyes.<br/>
Wherefrom what comes to thought’s sense of life? Nought.<br/>
All is either the irrational world we see<br/>
Or some aught-else whose being-unknown doth rot<br/>
Its use for our thought’s use. Whence taketh me<br/>
A qualm-like ache of life, a body-deep<br/>
Soul-hate of what we seek and what we weep.</p>
<h2>III.</h2>
<p>When I do think my meanest line shall be<br/>
More in Time’s use than my creating whole,<br/>
That future eyes more clearly shall feel me<br/>
In this inked page than in my direct soul;<br/>
When I conjecture put to make me seeing<br/>
Good readers of me in some aftertime,<br/>
Thankful to some idea of my being<br/>
That doth not even my with gone true soul rime;<br/>
An anger at the essence of the world,<br/>
That makes this thus, or thinkable this wise,<br/>
Takes my soul by the throat and makes it hurled<br/>
In nightly horrors of despaired surmise,<br/>
And I become the mere sense of a rage<br/>
That lacks the very words whose waste might ’suage.</p>
<h2>IV.</h2>
<p>I could not think of thee as piecèd rot,<br/>
Yet such thou wert, for thou hadst been long dead;<br/>
Yet thou liv’dst entire in my seeing thought<br/>
And what thou wert in me had never fled.<br/>
Nay, I had fixed the moments of thy beauty—<br/>
Thy ebbing smile, thy kiss’s readiness,<br/>
And memory had taught my heart the duty<br/>
To know thee ever at that deathlessness.<br/>
But when I came where thou wert laid, and saw<br/>
The natural flowers ignoring thee sans blame,<br/>
And the encroaching grass, with casual flaw,<br/>
Framing the stone to age where was thy name,<br/>
I knew not how to feel, nor what to be<br/>
Towards thy fate’s material secrecy.</p>
<h2>V.</h2>
<p>How can I think, or edge my thoughts to action,<br/>
When the miserly press of each day’s need<br/>
Aches to a narrowness of spilled distraction<br/>
My soul appalled at the world’s work’s time-greed?<br/>
How can I pause my thoughts upon the task<br/>
My soul was born to think that it must do<br/>
When every moment has a thought to ask<br/>
To fit the immediate craving of its cue?<br/>
The coin I’d heap for marrying my Muse<br/>
And build our home i’th’ greater Time-to-be<br/>
Becomes dissolved by needs of each day’s use<br/>
And I feel beggared of infinity,<br/>
Like a true-Christian sinner, each day flesh-driven<br/>
By his own act to forfeit his wished heaven.</p>
<h2>VI.</h2>
<p>As a bad orator, badly o’er-book-skilled,<br/>
Doth overflow his purpose with made heat,<br/>
And, like a clock, winds with withoutness willed<br/>
What should have been an inner instinct’s feat;<br/>
Or as a prose-wit, harshly poet turned,<br/>
Lacking the subtler music in his measure,<br/>
With useless care labours but to be spurned,<br/>
Courting in alien speech the Muse’s pleasure;<br/>
I study how to love or how to hate,<br/>
Estranged by consciousness from sentiment,<br/>
With a thought feeling forced to be sedate<br/>
Even when the feeling’s nature is violent;<br/>
As who would learn to swim without the river,<br/>
When nearest to the trick, as far as ever.</p>
<h2>VII.</h2>
<p>Thy words are torture to me, that scarce grieve thee—<br/>
That entire death shall null my entire thought;<br/>
And I feel torture, not that I believe thee,<br/>
But that I cannot disbelieve thee not.<br/>
Shall that of me that now contains the stars<br/>
Be by the very contained stars survived?<br/>
Thus were Fate all unjust. Yet what truth bars<br/>
An all unjust Fate’s truth from being believed?<br/>
Conjecture cannot fit to the seen world<br/>
A garment of its thought untorn or covering,<br/>
Or with its stuffed garb forge an otherworld<br/>
Without itself its dead deceit discovering;<br/>
So, all being possible, an idle thought may<br/>
Less idle thoughts, self-known no truer, dismay.</p>
<h2>VIII.</h2>
<p>How many masks wear we, and undermasks,<br/>
Upon our countenance of soul, and when,<br/>
If for self-sport the soul itself unmasks,<br/>
Knows it the last mask off and the face plain?<br/>
The true mask feels no inside to the mask<br/>
But looks out of the mask by co-masked eyes.<br/>
Whatever consciousness begins the task<br/>
The task’s accepted use to sleepness ties.<br/>
Like a child frighted by its mirrored faces,<br/>
Our souls, that children are, being thought-losing,<br/>
Foist otherness upon their seen grimaces<br/>
And get a whole world on their forgot causing;<br/>
And, when a thought would unmask our soul’s masking,<br/>
Itself goes not unmasked to the unmasking.</p>
<h2>IX.</h2>
<p>Oh to be idle loving idleness!<br/>
But I am idle all in hate of me;<br/>
Ever in action’s dream, in the false stress<br/>
Of purposed action never set to be.<br/>
Like a fierce beast self-penned in a bait-lair,<br/>
My will to act binds with excess my action,<br/>
Not-acting coils the thought with raged despair,<br/>
And acting rage doth paint despair distraction.<br/>
Like someone sinking in a treacherous sand,<br/>
Each gesture to deliver sinks the more;<br/>
The struggle avails not, and to raise no hand,<br/>
Though but more slowly useless, we’ve no power.<br/>
Hence live I the dead life each day doth bring,<br/>
Repurposed for next day’s repurposing.</p>
<h2>X.</h2>
<p>As to a child, I talked my heart asleep<br/>
With empty promise of the coming day,<br/>
And it slept rather for my words made sleep<br/>
Than from a thought of what their sense did say.<br/>
For did it care for sense, would it not wake<br/>
And question closer to the morrow’s pleasure?<br/>
Would it not edge nearer my words, to take<br/>
The promise in the meting of its measure?<br/>
So, if it slept, ’twas that it cared but for<br/>
The present sleepy use of promised joy,<br/>
Thanking the fruit but for the forecome flower<br/>
Which the less active senses best enjoy.<br/>
Thus with deceit do I detain the heart<br/>
Of which deceit’s self knows itself a part.</p>
<h2>XI.</h2>
<p>Like to a ship that storms urge on its course,<br/>
By its own trials our soul is surer made.<br/>
The very things that make the voyage worse<br/>
Do make it better; its peril is its aid.<br/>
And, as the storm drives from the storm, our heart<br/>
Within the peril disimperilled grows;<br/>
A port is near the more from port we part—<br/>
The port whereto our driven direction goes.<br/>
If we reap knowledge to cross-profit, this<br/>
From storms we learn, when the storm’s height doth drive—<br/>
That the black presence of its violence is<br/>
The pushing promise of near far blue skies.<br/>
Learn we but how to have the pilot-skill,<br/>
And the storm’s very might shall mate our will.</p>
<h2>XII.</h2>
<p>As the lone, frighted user of a night-road<br/>
Suddenly turns round, nothing to detect,<br/>
Yet on his fear’s sense keepeth still the load<br/>
Of that brink-nothing he doth but suspect;<br/>
And the cold terror moves to him more near<br/>
Of something that from nothing casts a spell,<br/>
That, when he moves, to fright more is not there,<br/>
And’s only visible when invisible<br/>
So I upon the world turn round in thought,<br/>
And nothing viewing do no courage take,<br/>
But my more terror, from no seen cause got,<br/>
To that felt corporate emptiness forsake,<br/>
And draw my sense of mystery’s horror from<br/>
Seeing no mystery’s mystery alone.</p>
<h2>XIII.</h2>
<p>When I should be asleep to mine own voice<br/>
In telling thee how much thy love’s my dream,<br/>
I find me listening to myself, the noise<br/>
Of my words othered in my hearing them.<br/>
Yet wonder not: this is the poet’s soul.<br/>
I could not tell thee well of how I love,<br/>
Loved I not less by knowing it, were all<br/>
My self my love and no thought love to prove.<br/>
What consciousness makes more by consciousness,<br/>
It makes less, for it makes it less itself,<br/>
My sense of love could not my love rich-dress<br/>
Did it not for it spend love’s own love-pelf.<br/>
Poet’s love’s this (as in these words I prove thee):<br/>
I love my love for thee more than I love thee.</p>
<h2>XIV.</h2>
<p>We are born at sunset and we die ere morn,<br/>
And the whole darkness of the world we know,<br/>
How can we guess its truth, to darkness born,<br/>
The obscure consequence of absent glow?<br/>
Only the stars do teach us light. We grasp<br/>
Their scattered smallnesses with thoughts that stray,<br/>
And, though their eyes look through night’s complete mask,<br/>
Yet they speak not the features of the day.<br/>
Why should these small denials of the whole<br/>
More than the black whole the pleased eyes attract?<br/>
Why what it calls «worth» does the captive soul<br/>
Add to the small and from the large detract?<br/>
So, put of light’s love wishing it night’s stretch,<br/>
A nightly thought of day we darkly reach.</p>
<h2>XV.</h2>
<p>Like a bad suitor desperate and trembling<br/>
From the mixed sense of being not loved and loving,<br/>
Who with feared longing half would know, dissembling<br/>
With what he’d wish proved what he fears soon proving,<br/>
I look with inner eyes afraid to look,<br/>
Yet perplexed into looking, at the worth<br/>
This verse may have and wonder, of my book,<br/>
To what thoughts shall’t in alien hearts give birth.<br/>
But, as he who doth love, and, loving, hopes,<br/>
Yet, hoping, fears, fears to put proof to proof,<br/>
And in his mind for possible proofs gropes,<br/>
Delaying the true proof, lest the real thing scoff,<br/>
I daily live, i’th’ fame I dream to see,<br/>
But by my thought of others’ thought of me.</p>
<h2>XVI.</h2>
<p>We never joy enjoy to that full point<br/>
Regret doth wish joy had enjoyèd been,<br/>
Nor have the strength regret to disappoint<br/>
Recalling not past joy’s thought, but its mien.<br/>
Yet joy was joy when it enjoyèd was<br/>
And after-enjoyed when as joy recalled,<br/>
It must have been joy ere its joy did pass<br/>
And, recalled, joy still, since its being-past galled.<br/>
Alas! All this is useless, for joy’s in<br/>
Enjoying, not in thinking of enjoying.<br/>
Its mere thought-mirroring gainst itself doth sin,<br/>
By mere reflecting solid life destroying,<br/>
Yet the more thought we take to thought to prove<br/>
It must not think, doth further from joy move.</p>
<h2>XVII.</h2>
<p>My love, and not I, is the egoist.<br/>
My love for thee loves itself more than thee;<br/>
Ay, more than me, in whom it doth exist,<br/>
And makes me live that it may feed on me.<br/>
In the country of bridges the bridge is<br/>
More real than the shores it doth unsever;<br/>
So in our world, all of Relation, this<br/>
Is true—that truer is Love than either lover.<br/>
This thought therefore comes lightly to Doubt’s door—<br/>
If we, seeing substance of this world, are not<br/>
Mere Intervals, God’s Absence and no more,<br/>
Hollows in real Consciousness and Thought.<br/>
And if ’tis possible to Thought to bear this fruit,<br/>
Why should it not be possible to Truth?</p>
<h2>XVIII.</h2>
<p>Indefinite space, which, by co-substance night,<br/>
In one black mystery two void mysteries blends;<br/>
The stray stars, whose innumerable light<br/>
Repeats one mystery till conjecture ends;<br/>
The stream of time, known by birth-bursting bubbles;<br/>
The gulf of silence, empty even of nought;<br/>
Thought’s high-walled maze, which the outed owner troubles<br/>
Because the string’s lost and the plan forgot:<br/>
When I think on this and that here I stand,<br/>
The thinker of these thoughts, emptily wise,<br/>
Holding up to my thinking my thing-hand<br/>
And looking at it with thought-alien eyes,<br/>
The prayer of my wonder looketh past<br/>
The universal darkness lone and vast.</p>
<h2>XIX.</h2>
<p>Beauty and love let no one separate,<br/>
Whom exact Nature did to each other fit,<br/>
Giving to Beauty love as finishing fate<br/>
And to Love beauty as true colour of it.<br/>
Let he but friend be who the soul finds fair,<br/>
But let none love outside the body’s thought,<br/>
So the seen couple’s togetherness shall bear<br/>
Truth to the beauty each in the other sought.<br/>
I could but love thee out of mockery<br/>
Of love and thee and mine own ugliness;<br/>
Therefore thy beauty I sing and wish not thee,<br/>
Thanking the Gods I long not out of place,<br/>
Lest, like a slave that for kings’ robes doth long,<br/>
Obtained, shall with mere wearing do them wrong.</p>
<h2>XX.</h2>
<p>When in the widening circle of rebirth<br/>
To a new flesh my travelled soul shall come,<br/>
And try again the unremembered earth<br/>
With the old sadness for the immortal home,<br/>
Shall I revisit these same differing fields<br/>
And cull the old new flowers with the same sense,<br/>
That some small breath of foiled remembrance yields,<br/>
Of more age than my days in this pretence?<br/>
Shall I again regret strange faces lost<br/>
Of which the present memory is forgot<br/>
And but in unseen bulks of vagueness tossed<br/>
Out of the closed sea and black night of Thought?<br/>
Were thy face one, what sweetness will’t not be,<br/>
Though by blind feeling, to remember thee!</p>
<h2>XXI.</h2>
<p>Thought was born blind, but Thought knows what is seeing.<br/>
Its careful touch, deciphering forms from shapes,<br/>
Still suggests form as aught whose proper being<br/>
Mere finding touch with erring darkness drapes.<br/>
Yet whence, except from guessed sight, does touch teach<br/>
That touch is but a close and empty sense?<br/>
How does mere touch, self-uncontented, reach<br/>
For some truer sense’s whole intelligence?<br/>
The thing once touched, if touch be now omitted,<br/>
Stands yet in memory real and outward known,<br/>
So the untouching memory of touch is fitted<br/>
With sense of a sense whereby far things are shown<br/>
So, by touch of untouching, wrongly aright,<br/>
Touch’ thought of seeing sees not things but Sight.</p>
<h2>XXII.</h2>
<p>My soul is a stiff pageant, man by man,<br/>
Of some Egyptian art than Egypt older,<br/>
Found in some tomb whose rite no guess can scan,<br/>
Where all things else to coloured dust did moulder.<br/>
Whate’er its sense may mean, its age is twin<br/>
To that of priesthoods whose feet stood near God,<br/>
When knowledge was so great that ’twas a sin<br/>
And man’s mere soul too man for its abode.<br/>
But when I ask what means that pageant I<br/>
And would look at it suddenly, I lose<br/>
The sense I had of seeing it, nor can try<br/>
Again to look, nor hath my memory a use<br/>
That seems recalling, save that it recalls<br/>
An emptiness of having seen those walls.</p>
<h2>XXIII.</h2>
<p>Even as upon a low and cloud-domed day,<br/>
When clouds are one cloud till the horizon,<br/>
Our thinking senses deem the sun away<br/>
And say «’tis sunless» and «there is no sun»;<br/>
And yet the very day they wrong truth by<br/>
Is of the unseen sun’s effluent essence,<br/>
The very words do give themselves the lie,<br/>
The very thought of absence comes from presence:<br/>
Even so deem we through Good of what is evil.<br/>
He speaks of light that speaks of absent light,<br/>
And absent god, becoming present devil,<br/>
Is still the absent god by essence’ right.<br/>
The withdrawn cause by being withdrawn doth get<br/>
(Being thereby cause still) the denied effect.</p>
<h2>XXIV.</h2>
<p>Something in me was born before the stars<br/>
And saw the sun begin from far away.<br/>
Our yellow, local day on its wont jars,<br/>
For it hath communed with an absolute day.<br/>
Through my Thought’s night, as a worn robe’s heard trail<br/>
That I have never seen, I drag this past<br/>
That saw the Possible like a dawn grow pale<br/>
On the lost night before it, mute and vast.<br/>
It dates remoter than God’s birth can reach,<br/>
That had no birth but the world’s coming after.<br/>
So the world’s to me as, after whispered speech,<br/>
The cause-ignored sudden echoing of laughter.<br/>
That ’t has a meaning my conjecture knows,<br/>
But that ’t has meaning’s all its meaning shows.</p>
<h2>XXV.</h2>
<p>We are in Fate and Fate’s and do but lack<br/>
Outness from soul to know ourselves its dwelling,<br/>
And do but compel Fate aside or back<br/>
By Fate’s own immanence in the compelling.<br/>
We are too far in us from outward truth<br/>
To know how much we are not what we are,<br/>
And live but in the heat of error’s youth,<br/>
Yet young enough its acting youth to ignore.<br/>
The doubleness of mind fails us, to glance<br/>
At our exterior presence amid things,<br/>
Sizing from otherness our countenance<br/>
And seeing our puppet will’s act-acting strings.<br/>
An unknown language speaks in us, which we<br/>
Are at the words of, fronted from reality.</p>
<h2>XXVI.</h2>
<p>The world is woven all of dream and error<br/>
And but one sureness in our truth may lie—<br/>
That when we hold to aught our thinking’s mirror<br/>
We know it not by knowing it thereby.<br/>
For but one side of things the mirror knows,<br/>
And knows it colded from its solidness.<br/>
A double lie its truth is; what it shows<br/>
By true show’s false and nowhere by true place.<br/>
Thought clouds our life’s day-sense with strangeness, yet<br/>
Never from strangeness more than that it’s strange<br/>
Doth buy our perplexed thinking, for we get<br/>
But the words’ sense from words—knowledge, truth, change.<br/>
We know the world is false, not what is true.<br/>
Yet we think on, knowing we ne’er shall know.</p>
<h2>XXVII.</h2>
<p>How yesterday is long ago! The past<br/>
Is a fixed infinite distance from to-day,<br/>
And bygone things, the first-lived as the last,<br/>
In irreparable sameness far away.<br/>
How the to-be is infinitely ever<br/>
Out of the place wherein it will be Now,<br/>
Like the seen wave yet far up in the river,<br/>
Which reaches not us, but the new-waved flow!<br/>
This thing Time is, whose being is having none,<br/>
The equable tyrant of our different fates,<br/>
Who could not be bought off by a shattered sun<br/>
Or tricked by new use of our careful dates.<br/>
This thing Time is, that to the grave-will bear<br/>
My heart, sure but of it and of my fear.</p>
<h2>XXVIII.</h2>
<p>The edge of the green wave whitely doth hiss<br/>
Upon the wetted sand. I look, yet dream.<br/>
Surely reality cannot be this!<br/>
Somehow, somewhere this surely doth but seem!<br/>
The sky, the sea, this great extent disclosed<br/>
Of outward joy, this bulk of life we feel,<br/>
Is not something, but something interposed.<br/>
Only what in this is not this is real.<br/>
If this be to have sense, if to be awake<br/>
Be but to see this bright, great sleep of things,<br/>
For the rarer potion mine own dreams I’ll take<br/>
And for truth commune with imaginings,<br/>
Holding a dream too bitter, a too fair curse,<br/>
This common sleep of men, the universe.</p>
<h2>XXIX.</h2>
<p>My weary life, that lives unsatisfied<br/>
On the foiled off-brink of being e’er but this,<br/>
To whom the power to will hath been denied<br/>
And the will to renounce doth also miss;<br/>
My sated life, with having nothing sated,<br/>
In the motion of moving poisèd aye,<br/>
Within its dreams from its own dreams abated—<br/>
This life let the Gods change or take away.<br/>
For this endless succession of empty hours,<br/>
Like deserts after deserts, voidly one,<br/>
Doth undermine the very dreaming powers<br/>
And dull even thought’s active inaction,<br/>
Tainting with fore-unwilled will the dreamed act<br/>
Twice thus removed from the unobtained fact.</p>
<h2>XXX.</h2>
<p>I do not know what truth the false untruth<br/>
Of this sad sense of the seen world may own,<br/>
Or if this flowered plant bears also a fruit<br/>
Unto the true reality unknown.<br/>
But as the rainbow, neither earth’s nor sky’s,<br/>
Stands in the dripping freshness of lulled rain,<br/>
A hope, not real yet not fancy’s, lies<br/>
Athwart the moment of our ceasing pain.<br/>
Somehow, since pain is felt yet felt as ill,<br/>
Hope hath a better warrant than being hoped;<br/>
Since pain is felt as aught we should not feel<br/>
Man hath a Nature’s reason for having groped,<br/>
Since Time was Time and age and grief his measures,<br/>
Towards a better shelter than Time’s pleasures.</p>
<h2>XXXI.</h2>
<p>I am older than Nature and her Time<br/>
By all the timeless age of Consciousness,<br/>
And my adult oblivion of the clime<br/>
Where I was born makes me not countryless.<br/>
Ay, and dim through my daylight thoughts escape<br/>
Yearnings for that land where my childhood dreamed,<br/>
Which I cannot recall in colour or shape<br/>
But haunts my hours like something that hath gleamed<br/>
And yet is not as light remembered,<br/>
Nor to the left or to the right conceived;<br/>
And all round me tastes as if life were dead<br/>
And the world made but to be disbelieved.<br/>
Thus I my hope on unknown truth lay; yet<br/>
How but by hope do I the unknown truth get?</p>
<h2>XXXII.</h2>
<p>When I have sense of what to sense appears,<br/>
Sense is sense ere ’tis mine or mine in me is.<br/>
When I hear, Hearing, ere I do hear, hears.<br/>
When I see, before me abstract Seeing sees.<br/>
I am part Soul part I in all I touch—<br/>
Soul by that part I hold in common with all,<br/>
And I the spoiled part, that doth make sense such<br/>
As I can err by it and my sense mine call.<br/>
The rest is wondering what these thoughts may mean,<br/>
That come to explain and suddenly are gone,<br/>
Like messengers that mock the message’ mien,<br/>
Explaining all but the explanation;<br/>
As if we a ciphered letter’s cipher hit<br/>
And find it in an unknown language writ.</p>
<h2>XXXIII.</h2>
<p>He that goes back does, since he goes, advance,<br/>
Though he doth not advance who goeth back,<br/>
And he that seeks, though he on nothing chance,<br/>
May still by words be said to find a lack.<br/>
This paradox of having, that is nought<br/>
In the world’s meaning of the things it screens,<br/>
Is yet true of the substance of pure thought<br/>
And there means something by the nought it means.<br/>
For thinking nought does on nought being confer,<br/>
As giving not is acting not to give,<br/>
And, to the same unbribed true thought, to err<br/>
Is to find truth, though by its negative.<br/>
So why call this world false, if false to be<br/>
Be to be aught, and being aught Being to be?</p>
<h2>XXXIV.</h2>
<p>Happy the maimed, the halt, the mad, the blind—<br/>
All who, stamped separate by curtailing birth,<br/>
Owe no duty’s allegiance to mankind<br/>
Nor stand a valuing in their scheme of worth!<br/>
But I, whom Fate, not Nature, did curtail,<br/>
By no exterior voidness being exempt,<br/>
Must bear accusing glances where I fail,<br/>
Fixed in the general orbit of contempt.<br/>
Fate, less than Nature in being kind to lacking,<br/>
Giving the ill, shows not as outer cause,<br/>
Making our mock-free will the mirror’s backing<br/>
Which Fate’s own acts as if in itself shows;<br/>
And men, like children, seeing the image there,<br/>
Take place for cause and make our will Fate bear.</p>
<h2>XXXV.</h2>
<p>Good. I have done. My heart weighs. I am sad.<br/>
The outer day, void statue of lit blue,<br/>
Is altogether outward, other, glad<br/>
At mere being not-I (so my aches construe).<br/>
I, that have failed in everything, bewail<br/>
Nothing this hour but that I have bewailed,<br/>
For in the general fate what is’t to fail?<br/>
Why, fate being past for Fate, ’tis but to have failed.<br/>
Whatever hap-or stop, what matters it,<br/>
Sith to the mattering our will bringeth nought?<br/>
With the higher trifling let us world our wit,<br/>
Conscious that, if we do’t, that was the lot<br/>
The regular stars bound us to, when they stood<br/>
Godfathers to our birth and to our blood.</p>
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