{"id":164766,"date":"2023-06-23T11:13:00","date_gmt":"2023-06-23T15:13:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/?p=164766"},"modified":"2023-06-26T10:37:01","modified_gmt":"2023-06-26T14:37:01","slug":"fernando-pessoas-many-personalities","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2023\/06\/23\/fernando-pessoas-many-personalities\/","title":{"rendered":"Fernando Pessoa\u2019s Unselving"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"attachment_164768\" style=\"width: 820px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-164768\" class=\"wp-image-164768 size-large\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/fernando-pessoa-810x1024.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"810\" height=\"1024\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/fernando-pessoa-810x1024.jpg 810w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/fernando-pessoa-237x300.jpg 237w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/fernando-pessoa-768x971.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/fernando-pessoa-1215x1536.jpg 1215w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/fernando-pessoa-1621x2048.jpg 1621w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/fernando-pessoa-scaled.jpg 2026w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-164768\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Pessoa in 1934. From <em>Os Objectos de Fernando Pessoa | Fernando Pessoa\u2019s Objects<\/em> by Jer\u00f3nimo Pizarro, Patricio Ferrari, and Antonio Cardiello. Courtesy of the Casa Fernando Pessoa and Dom Quixote.<\/p><\/div>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">On July 11, 1903, a long narrative poem called \u201cThe Miner\u2019s Song\u201d by Karl P. Effield appeared in the<em> Natal Mercury<\/em>, a weekly newspaper in Durban, South Africa. Effield\u2014who claimed to be from Boston\u2014was actually none other than the Portuguese writer Fernando Pessoa, then a high school student in Durban. This was the first of Pessoa\u2019s English-language fictitious authors to appear in print\u2014the beginning of Pessoa\u2019s unusual mode of self-othering. The adoption of different personae allowed him to go beyond a nom de plume, and take on unpopular, controversial, and even extreme points of view in both his poetry and prose.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">While in South Africa, where Pessoa lived between 1896 and 1905, he sent another work to the<em> Natal Mercury<\/em> under the name of Charles Robert Anon, attempting without success to publish three political sonnets about the Russo-Japanese War of 1904\u20131905. Pessoa\u2019s early fictitious authors wrote in English, French, and Portuguese\u2014the three languages he continued to use until he died, at age forty-seven. These first invented writers, which he would go on to call \u201cheteronyms,\u201d composed loose texts mostly in the form of first drafts; but others, like Bernardo Soares (whom Pessoa created around 1920) or the major heteronyms (Alberto Caeiro, A\u0301lvaro de Campos, and Ricardo Reis in 1914), produced a very solid body of work. By the time Pessoa was twenty-six years old, he had already invented a hundred literary personae.<!--more--><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Alberto Caeiro was the central fictitious figure of Pessoa\u2019s literary universe. Born in Lisbon on April 16, 1889, Caeiro died of tuberculosis in 1915. Pessoa said that Caeiro poetically arrived in his life on March 8, 1914\u2014which in a famous letter to the Portuguese literary critic Adolfo Casais Monteiro he described as a \u201ctriumphal day.\u201d The poet and novelist M\u00e1rio de S\u00e1-Carneiro was one of Pessoa\u2019s closest friends in Lisbon, and Caeiro (perhaps a pun on S\u00e1-Carneiro\u2019s name) seems to have come into being as a joke: \u201cI thought I would play a trick on S\u00e1-Carneiro and invent a bucolic poet of a rather complicated kind,\u201d wrote Pessoa in the same letter. Caeiro\u2019s \u201cdeath\u201d seems to have been influenced, in retrospect, by S\u00e1-Carneiro\u2019s suicide in Paris on April 26, 1916. As Pessoa wrote in the review <em>Athena<\/em> in 1924, \u201cThose whom the gods love die young.\u201d By that time, he had produced the body of poems for which Caeiro would be remembered\u2014<em>The Keeper of Sheep.<\/em><\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_164769\" style=\"width: 1034px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-164769\" class=\"wp-image-164769 size-large\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/caeiro-signature-1024x731.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1024\" height=\"731\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/caeiro-signature-1024x731.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/caeiro-signature-300x214.jpg 300w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/caeiro-signature-768x549.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/caeiro-signature.jpg 1428w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-164769\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Courtesy of Tinta da china.<\/p><\/div>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Then there was \u00c1lvaro de Campos, the most prolific and eccentric of Pessoa\u2019s heteronyms. In the aforementioned letter to the critic, we find the most complete description of him: \u201cCampos was born in Tavira, on October 15, 1890&#8230;. He is a naval engineer (by way of Glasgow)\u2026, tall (5 feet, 74 inches\u2014almost one more inch taller than me), thin and a bit prone to crouching&#8230;. [He is] between white and dark, vaguely like a Portuguese Jew; [his] hair, however, is smooth and normally pushed to the side, [he wears a] monocle&#8230;. He received an average high school education; then he was sent to Scotland to study engineering, first mechanics and then naval.\u201d \u00c1lvaro de Campos was a self-indulgent and bisexual dandy who celebrated the modern world with its roaring of machines and the hustle and bustle of city life.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_164781\" style=\"width: 1034px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-164781\" class=\"wp-image-164781 size-large\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/campos-signature-1024x205.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1024\" height=\"205\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/campos-signature-1024x205.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/campos-signature-300x60.jpg 300w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/campos-signature-768x154.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/campos-signature.jpg 1093w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-164781\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Courtesy of Tinta da china.<\/p><\/div>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Pessoa links Campos to an array of literary influences, \u201cin which Walt Whitman predominates, albeit below Caeiro\u2019s,\u201d and wrote that he had decided Campos to produce \u201cseveral compositions, generally scandalous and irritating in nature, especially for Fernando Pessoa, who, in any case, produces and publishes them, however much he disagrees with such texts.\u201d Undoubtedly Campos was Pessoa\u2019s most sardonic and fierce of the heteronymic voice, sharing biographical facts with Nietzsche (also born on October 15) and affinities with Blake (\u201cLike Blake, I want the close companionship of angels\u201d)<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The literary works of Campos may be split into three phases: the decadent (dandy) phase, the futuristic phase, and the pessimistic (existentialist) phase. Campos shows mixed affinities with Whitman and the Italian futurist F. T. Marinetti, mainly in the second phase: poems like \u201cTriumphal Ode,\u201d \u201cMaritime Ode,\u201d and \u201cUltimatum\u201d praise the power of rising technology, the strength of machines, the dark side of industrial civilization, and an enigmatic love for machineries. In the last phase, Pessoa qua Campos reveals the emptiness and nostalgia that may come in the winter of one\u2019s life. This was when he wrote poems such as \u201cLisbon Revisited\u201d and \u201cTobacconist\u2019s Shop,\u201d the long, nihilistic poem of defeat written in 1928 and published five years later in the review <em>presen\u00e7a<\/em>. Considered one of the monuments of modernist poetry, it opens thus:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">I\u2019m nothing.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">I\u2019ll always be nothing.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">I can\u2019t even hope to be nothing.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">That said, I have inside me all the dreams of the world.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Although Campos wrote poetry and prose in Portuguese, he also used English and French in some of his lines and titles. Among his most noteworthy prose writings we find \u201cNotes in Memory of My Master Caeiro,\u201d published in the <em>Presen\u00e7a <\/em>journal in 1931. In these notes, Campos offers an elucidating description of himself:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">I am exasperatingly sensitive and exasperatingly intelligent. In this respect (apart from a smidgeon more sensibility and a smidgeon less intelligence) I resemble Fernando Pessoa; however, while in Fernando, sensibility and intelligence interpenetrate, merge and intersect, in me, they exist in parallel or, rather, they overlap. They are not spouses, they are estranged twins.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In the same letter to Casais Monteiro from 1935, Pessoa provides a detailed description of Ricardo Reis, his third major heteronym\u2014defining him as a doctor from Porto, born in 1887, educated in a Jesuit college, and living in Brazil since 1919, out of fidelity to his monarchical ideals. Pessoa also adds to this portrait that Reis learned Latin through someone else\u2019s education\u2014probably with the Jesuits\u2014and Greek by himself. These details serve to humanize the classicist Reis, the serious, measured, and semi-indolent Reis, who should embody a neoclassical theory opposed to \u201cmodern romanticism\u201d and \u201cneoclassicism in the manner of [Charles] Maurras.\u201d Reis wrote epigrams and elegies, in addition to odes, and his poetry is largely characterized by the use of specific meters (especially the regular use of decasyllabic verses alternating, or not, with hexasyllables). Pessoa-cum-Reis wrote a substantial body of poetry and prose. Among the latter we find texts on paganism as well as the oft-cited essay \u201cMilton Is Greater Than Shakespeare.\u201d In his prose Reis makes a vehement claim to Hellenism and issues a firm condemnation of Christianity. He criticizes Matthew Arnold, Walter Pater, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Oscar Wilde, among others\u2014a kind of predecessor to contemporary neo-pagan aesthetes and theorists who are not entirely freed from Christian sentimentality.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_164772\" style=\"width: 365px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-164772\" class=\"wp-image-164772 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/reis-signature.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"355\" height=\"252\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/reis-signature.jpg 355w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/reis-signature-300x213.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-164772\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Courtesy of Tinta da china.<\/p><\/div>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400; text-align: center;\">***<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Fernando Pessoa\u2019s modernist epic is the result of a radical displacement of the subject, which he described as a \u201cdrama in people\u201d\u2014made up of the poetic trio and his other aliases who Pessoa gradually crafted between languages, a vast collection of books, and Lisbon\u2014the beloved city of his birth.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Following the publication of <em>The Book of Disquiet<\/em> in 2017, I met with the New Directions vice president and senior editor Declan Spring in New York City suggesting that we bring out Pessoa\u2019s major heteronyms in the same order that Pessoa himself had birthed them. Thus, we started with Alberto Caeiro, master of the coterie. While <em>The Complete Works of Alberto Caeiro<\/em> came out in the summer of 2020, <em>The Complete Works of \u00c1lvaro de Campos<\/em> is forthcoming on July 4, 2023. These three Pessoa books\u2014all including some facsimiles from the Pessoa papers held at the National Library of Portugal\u2014will be followed by <em>The Complete Works of Ricardo Reis<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In translating Pessoa\u2019s heteronyms, one thing we see clearly is the influence of reading on Pessoa\u2019s plural and inquiring mind. I have no doubt that reading more than writing was his primary and long-lasting literary occupation. His marginalia are of great interest; so are his many influences. This is to say that the more we know about what Pessoa read and when, the better equipped we are as translators of his works\u2014especially to see more clearly his poetical diction, meters, and rhythms at the core of each heteronymic voice.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_164770\" style=\"width: 867px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-164770\" class=\"wp-image-164770 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/pessoa-signture-2.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"857\" height=\"223\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/pessoa-signture-2.jpg 857w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/pessoa-signture-2-300x78.jpg 300w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/pessoa-signture-2-768x200.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-164770\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Courtesy of tinta da china.<\/p><\/div>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">On November 29, 1935, while lying in bed at the H\u00f4pital Saint Louis des Fran\u00e7ais, Fernando Pessoa wrote his last words: \u201cI know not what to-morrow will bring.\u201d In the translation of an epigram by Palladas of Alexandria, published in the first volume of the <em>Greek Anthology<\/em> and still in his private library, we read the following pencil-marked closing line: \u201cTo-day let me live well; none knows what may be to-morrow.\u201d Whether this depicts the consummation of a life consecrated to literature or the memory of Pessoa, it reconfirms the fact that Pessoa\u2019s writings emerged from an intense contact with a vast array of books. His work has reconfigured literature, including the way we look at literature. May our century be one for such multitudinous Pessoa.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The Complete Works of \u00c1lvaro de Campos <em>by Fernando Pessoa, edited and introduced by Jer\u00f3nimo Pizarro and Antonio Cardiello, and translated from the Portuguese by Margaret Jull Costa and Patricio Ferrari, will be published by New Directions in July. Ferrari has translated Fernando Pessoa, Alejandra Pizarnik, and Ant\u00f3nio Os\u00f3rio, among others. He is a polyglot poet, translator, and editor, resides in New York City, and teaches at Sarah Lawrence College. Ferrari is currently working on \u201cElsehere,\u201d a multilingual trilogy.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Poetry and prose quoted from<\/em>\u00a0The Complete Works of \u00c1lvaro de Campos (2023)\u00a0<em>and<\/em> The Complete Works of Alberto Caeiro (2020)\u00a0<em>by Fernando Pessoa. Used with permission of New Directions Publishing. <b><i><\/i><\/b><\/em><em>\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u201cThis was the first of Pessoa\u2019s English-language fictitious authors to appear in print\u2014the beginning of Pessoa\u2019s unusual mode of self-othering.\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1554,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[31215],"tags":[67827,22769,7578],"class_list":["post-164766","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-on-books","tag-featured","tag-fernando-pessoa","tag-pseudonyms"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.4 (Yoast SEO v25.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Fernando Pessoa\u2019s Unselving by Patricio Ferrari<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" 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