Temas
Poemas neste tema

Alma

Fernando Tavares Rodrigues

Fernando Tavares Rodrigues

Carta de Amor

Para te dizer tão-só que te queria
Como se o tempo fosse um sentimento
bastava o teu sorriso de um outro dia
nesse instante em que fomos um momento.
Dizer amor como se fosse proibido
entre os meus braços enlaçar-te mais
como um livro devorado e nunca lido.
Será pecado, amor, amar-te demais?
Esperar como se fosse (des) esperar-te,
essa certeza de te ter antes de ter.
Ensaiar sozinho a nossa arte
de fazer amor antes de ser.
Adivinhar nos olhos que não vejo
a sede dessa boca que não canta
e deitar-me ao teu lado como o Tejo
aos pés dessa Lisboa que ele encanta.
Sentir falta de ti por tu não estares
talvez por não saber se tu existes
(percorrendo em silêncio esses altares
em sacrifícios pagãos de olhos tristes).
Ausência, sim. Amor visto por dentro,
certezas ao contrário, por estar só.
Pesadelo no meu sonho noite adentro
quando, ao meu lado, dorme o que não sou.
E, afinal, depois o que ficou
das noites perdidas à procura
de um resto de virtude que passou
por nós em co(r)pos de loucura?
Apenas mais um corpo que marcou
a esperança disfarçada de aventura...
(Da estupidez dos dias já estou farto,
das noites repetidas já cansado.
Mas, afinal, meu Deus, quando é que parto
para começar, enfim, este meu fado?)
No fim deste caminho de pecados
feito de desencontros e de encantos,
de palavras e de corpos já usados
onde ficamos sós, sempre, entre tantos...
Que fique como um dedo a nossa marca
e do que foi um beijo o nosso cheiro:
Tesouro que não somos. Fique a arca
que guarde o que vivemos por inteiro.

1 221 1
Fernando Pessoa

Fernando Pessoa

16 - LULLABY

LULLABY *

My heart is full of lazy pain
And an old English lullaby
Comes out of that mist of my brain.

Upon my lap my sovereign sits
And sucks upon my breast;
Meantime his love maintains my life
And gives my sense her rest.
Sing lullaby, my little boy,
Sing lullaby, mine only joy!

I would give all my singing trade
To be the distant English child
For whom this happy song was made.

When thou hast taken thy repast,
Repose, my babe, on me;
So may thy mother and thy nurse
Thy cradle also be.
Sing lullaby, my little boy,
Sing lullably, mine only joy!

There must have been true happiness
Near where this song was sung to small
White hands clutching a mother's dress.

I grieve that duty doth not work
All that my wishing would,
Because I would not be to thee
But in the best I should.
Sing lullaby, my little boy,
Sing lullaby, mine only joy!

O what a sorrow comes to me
Knowing the bitterness I have
While that child had this lullaby!

Yet as I am, and as I may,
I must and will be thine,
Though all too little for thy self
Vouchsafing to be mine,
Sing lullaby, my little boy,
Sing lullaby, mine only joy!

My heart aches to be able to weep.
O to think of this song being sung
And the child smiling in its sleep!

Upon my lap my sovereign sits
And sucks upon my breast;
Meantime his love maintains my life
And gives my sense her rest.
Sing lullaby, my little boy,
Sing lullaby, mine only joy!

I was a child too, but would now
Be the child, and no other hearing
This song low-breathed upon its brow.

When thou hast taken thy repast,
Repose, my babe, on me,
So may thy mother and thy nurse
Thy cradle also be.
Sing lullaby, my little boy,
Sing lullaby, mine only joy!

O that I could return to that
Happy time that was never mine
And which I live but to regret!

I grieve that duty doth not work
All that my wishing would,
Because I would not be to thee
But in the best I should.
Sing lullaby, my little boy,
Sing lullaby, mine only joy!

Ay, sing on in my soul, old voice,
So motherfully laying to sleep
The babe that quietly doth rejoice.

Yet as I am, and as I may,
I must and will be thine,
Though all too little for thy self
Vouchsafing to be mine.
Sing lullaby, my little boy,
Sing lullaby, mine only joy!

Sing on and let my heart not weep
Because sometime a child could have
This song to lull him into sleep!

Yet as I am, and as I may,
I must and will be thine,
Though all too little for thy self
Vouchsafing to be mine.
Sing lullaby, my little boy,
Sing lullaby, mine only joy!

Somehow somewhere I heard this song,
I was part of the happiness
That lived its idle lines along.

Yet as I am, and as I may,
I must and will be thine,
Though all too little for thy self
Vouchsafing to be mine.
Sing lullaby, my little boy
Sing lullaby, mine only joy!

Ay, somehow, somewhere I was that
Child, and my heart lay happy asleep.
Now – oh my sad and unknown fate!


* The «Lullaby» quoted is the 134th. poem in Palgrave's Golden Treasury. It was taken by him from Martin Peerson's Private Music, a Song-Book of 1620. The «Lullaby» is here given twice over, and the last stanza twice again.
4 856 1