Everything and Nothing
An essay on Shakespeare by Jorge Luis Borges
There was no one in him; behind his face (which even in the
poor paintings of the period is unlike any other) and his words, which were
flowing, imaginative, and emotional, there was nothing but a little chill, a
dream not dreamed by anyone. At first he thought everyone was like him, but the
puzzled look on a friend's face when he remarked on that emptiness told him he
was mistaken and convinced him forever that an individual must not differ from
his species.
Occasionally he thought he would find in books the cure for
his ill, and so he learned the small Latin and less Greek of which a
contemporary was to speak. Later he thought that in the exercise of a basic
human ritual he might well find what he sought, and he let himself be initiated
by Anne Hathaway one long June afternoon.
At twenty-odd he went to London.
Instinctively, he had already trained himself in the habit of pretending that
he was someone, so it would not be discovered that he was no one. In London he hit upon
the profession to which he was predestined, that of
the actor, who plays on stage at being someone else. His playacting taught him
a singular happiness, perhaps the first he had known; but when the last line
was applauded and the last corpse removed from the stage, the hated sense of
unreality came over him again. He ceased to be Ferrex
or Tamburlaine and again became no one at all.
Trapped, he fell to imagining other heroes and other tragic
tales. Thus, while in London's
bawdyhouses and taverns his body fulfilled its destiny as body, the soul that
dwelled in it was Caesar, failing to heed the soothsayer's warning, and Juliet,
detesting the lark, and Macbeth, conversing on the heath with the witches, who
are also the fates. Nobody was ever as many men as that man, who like the
Egyptian Proteus managed to exhaust all the possible shapes of being. At times
he slipped into some corner of his work a confession, certain that it would not
be deciphered; Richard swears that in his single person he plays many parts,
and Iago says with strange words, "I am not what I am." His passages
on the fundamental identity of existing, dreaming, and acting are famous. ("To be or not to be," indeed...
-PF)
Twenty years he persisted in that controlled hallucination,
but one morning he was overcome by the excess and the horror of being so many
kings who die by the sword and so many unhappy lovers who come together, fall
apart, then despair in lines shaking with beauty. That same day he cast off his
theater. Before a week was out he had returned to the village of his birth,
where he recovered the trees and the river of his childhood; and he let them
simply exist, free from all the mythological allusions and Latin phrases his
imagination had wrapped them with before.
He had to be someone; he became a retired impresario who has
made his fortune and who interests himself in loans, lawsuits, and petty usury.
In this character he dictated the barren final will and testament that we know,
deliberately wringing from it every drop of emotion and literature. Friends
from London used to
visit his retreat, and for them he would don the mantle of poet.
History records that, before or after he died, he found
himself before God and he asked: "I, who have been so many men in vain,
want to be one man: myself." The voice of God replied from a whirlwind:
"But I, too, am not one self; I dream the world as you dreamed your work,
dear Shakespeare, and among the shapes of my dream are you, who, like me, are
many persons—and none."
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