Sunrise, by T. C. Steele
Jorge Luis Borges

To Beatriz Bibiloni Webster de Bullrich

I

 
The useless dawn finds me in a deserted street–corner; I have outlived the night.
Nights are proud waves; darkblue topheavy waves laden with all the hues of deep spoil, laden with things unlikely and desirable.
Nights have a habit of mysterious gifts and refusals, of things half given away, half withheld, of joys with a dark hemisphere. Nights act that way, I tell you.
The surge, that night, left me the customary shreds
and odd ends: some hated friends to chat with, music for dreams, and the smoking of bitter ashes.  The things my hungry heart has no use for.
The big wave brought you.
Words, any words, your laughter; and you so lazily and incessantly beautiful.  We talked and you have forgotten the words.
The shattering dawn finds me in a deserted street of my city.
Your profile turned away, the sounds that go to make your name, the lilt of your laughter: these are the illustrious toys you have left me.
I turn them over in the dawn, I lose them, I find them; I tell them to the few stray dogs and to the few stray stars of the dawn.
Your dark rich life...\nI must get at you, somehow; I put away those illustrious toys you have left me, I want your hidden look, your real smile—that lonely, mocking smile your cool mirror knows.
 

II

 
What can I hold you with?
I offer you lean streets, desperate sunsets, the moon of the jagged suburbs.
I offer you the bitterness of a man who has looked long and long at the lonely moon.
I offer you my ancestors, my dead men, the ghosts that living men have
     honoured in bronze: my father’s father killed in the frontier of
     Buenos Aires, two bullets through his lungs, bearded and dead,
     wrapped by his soldiers in the hide of a cow; my mother’s
     grandfather—just twentyfour—heading a charge of three hundred
     men in Peru, now ghosts on vanished horses.
I offer you whatever insight my books may hold, whatever manliness or humour my life.
I offer you the loyalty of a man who has never been loyal.
I offer you that kernel of myself that I have saved, somehow—the central heart that deals not in words, traffics not with dreams, and is untouched by time, by joy, by adversities.
I offer you the memory of a yellow rose seen at sunset, years before you were born.
I offer you explanations of yourself, theories about yourself, authentic and surprising news of yourself.
I can give you my loneliness, my darkness, the hunger of my heart; I am trying to bribe you with uncertainty, with danger, with defeat.
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