Remorse For Any Death
Jorge Luis Borges
Free of memory and of hope, limitless, abstract, almost future, the dead man is not a dead man: he is death. Like the God of the mystics, of Whom anything that could be said must be denied, the dead one, alien everywhere, is but the ruin and absence of the world. We rob him of everything, we leave him not so much as a color or syllable: here, the courtyard which his eyes no longer see, there, the sidewalk where his hope lay in wait. Even what we are thinking, he could be thinking; we have divvied up like thieves the booty of nights and days.
Next 10 Poems
- Jorge Luis Borges : Shinto
- Jorge Luis Borges : Susana Soca
- Jorge Luis Borges : That One
- Jorge Luis Borges : The Art Of Poetry
- Jorge Luis Borges : The Other Tiger
- Jorge Luis Borges : To A Cat
- Jorge Luis Borges : We Are The Time. We Are The Famous
- William Lisle Bowles : At A Village In Scotland
- William Lisle Bowles : At Dover Cliffs, July 20th 1787
- William Lisle Bowles : Bereavement
Previous 10 Poems
- Jorge Luis Borges : Other Tiger, The
- Jorge Luis Borges : Limits
- Jorge Luis Borges : Instants
- Jorge Luis Borges : History Of The Night
- Jorge Luis Borges : Elegy
- Jorge Luis Borges : Browning Decides To Be A Poet
- Jorge Luis Borges : Art Of Poetry, The
- Jorge Luis Borges : Adam Cast Forth
- William Blake : You Don't Believe
- William Blake : Wild Flower's Song, The