Come and kiss me
One fine day you decide to talk less and less about the things you care
most about, and when you have to say something, it costs you an effort …
You’re good and sick of hearing yourself talk … you abridge … You give
up … For thirty years you’ve been talking … You don’t care about being
right anymore. You even lose your desire to keep hold of the small place
you’d reserved yourself among the pleasures of life … You’re fed up …
From that time on you’re content to eat a little something, cadge a
little warmth, and sleep as much as possible on the road to nowhere. To
rekindle your interest, you’d have to think up some new grimaces to put
on in the presence of others … But you no longer have the strength to
renew your repertory. You stammer. Sure, you still look for excuses for
hanging around with the boys, but death is there too, stinking, right
beside you, it’s there the whole time, less mysterious than a game of
poker. The only thing you continue to value is petty regrets, like not
finding time to run out to Bois-Colombes to see your uncle while he was
still alive, the one whose little song died forever one afternoon in
February. That horrible little regret is all we have left of life, we’ve
vomited up the rest along the way, with a good deal of effort and
misery. We’re nothing now but an old lamppost with memories on a street
where hardly anyone passes anymore
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου