from "The Book of Disquiet," Fernando Pessoa
I read and am liberated. I acquire objectivity. I cease being myself
and so scattered. And what I read, instead of being like a nearly
invisible suit that sometimes oppresses me, is the external world’s
tremendous and remarkable clarity, the sun that sees everyone, the moon
that splotches the still earth with shadows, the wide expanses that end
in the sea, the blackly solid trees whose tops greenly wave the steady
peace of ponds on farms, the terraced slopes with their paths overgrown
by grape-vines.