|
EXPRESSION
|
SPIRITUALITY
IN THE ARTS
On Life
by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Editor’s Note: We received this by email and felt that Marquez's words should be
shared. Gabriel Garcia Marquez has retired from public life due to health reasons:
cancer of the lymph nodes. He sent this farewell letter to his friends, which has
been translated and posted on the Internet. Marquez's style of writing was often
referred to as "magical realism." Doesn't that describe the enchanted kingdom
where we all live?
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
If for an instant God were to forget that I am a rag doll and gifted me with a piece
of life, possibly I wouldn't say all that I think, but rather I would think of all
that I say. I would value things, not for their worth but for what they mean. I would
sleep little, dream more, understanding that for each minute we close our eyes we
lose sixty seconds of light.
I would walk when others hold back, I would wake when others sleep. I would listen
when others talk, and how I would enjoy a good chocolate ice cream!
If God were to give me a piece of life, I would dress simply, throw myself face first
into the sun, baring not only my body but also my soul.
My God, if I had a heart, I would write my hate on ice, and wait for the sun to show.
Over the stars I would paint with a Van Gogh dream a Benedetti poem, and a Serrat
song would be the serenade I'd offer to the moon. With my tears I would water roses,
to feel the pain of their thorns, and the red kiss of their petals...
My God, if I had a piece of life... I wouldn't let a single day pass without telling
the people I love that I love them. I would convince each woman and each man that
they are my favorites, and I would live in love with love.
I would show men how very wrong they are to think that they cease to be in love when
they grow old, not knowing that they grow old when they cease to be in love! To a
child I shall give wings, but I shall let him learn to fly on his own. I would teach
the old that death does not come with old age, but with forgetting.
So much have I learned from you, oh men...
I have learned that everyone wants to live on the peak of the mountain, without knowing
that real happiness is in how it is scaled. I have learned that when a newborn child
squeezes for the first time with his tiny fist his father's finger, he has him trapped
forever. I have learned that a man has the right to look down on another only when
he has to help the other get to his feet. From you I have learned so many things,
but in truth they won't be of much use, for when I keep them within this suit, unhappily
shall I be dying.
Gabriel Garcia Marquez
1982 Nobel Laureate in Literature |
|
SEPT
2001
|
|
 |