Knowing how easily even the smallest things torture me, I deliberately avoid contact with them. A cloud passing in front of the sun is enough to make me suffer, how then should I not suffer in the darkness of the endlessly overcast sky of my own life?
My isolation is not a search for happiness, which I do not have the heart to win, nor for peace, which one finds only when it will never more be lost; what I seek is sleep, extinction, a small surrender.
To me the four walls of my miserable room are both prison cell and far horizon, both bed and coffin. My happiest hours are those in which I think nothing, want nothing, when I do not even dream, but lost myself in some spurious vegetable torpor, moss growing on the surface of life. Without a trace of bitterness I savour my absurd awareness of being nothing, a mere foretaste of death and extinction.
I never had anyone I could call 'Master.' No Christ died for me. No Buddha showed me the right path. In the depths of my dreams no Apollo or Athena appeared to enlighten my soul.
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The Book of Disquiet (Serpent's Tail Classics)
by Fernando Pessoa
p. 50
[This British edition and translation is far superior to the one from Penguin in the US.]
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