The Perfect World
God of lost souls, thou who are lost amongst the gods, hear
me:
Gentle Destiny that watchest over us, mad, wandering
spirits, hear me:
I dwell in the midst of a perfect race, I the most
imperfect.
I, a human chaos, a nebula of confused elements, I move
amongst finished worlds—peoples of complete laws and pure order, whose thoughts
are assorted, whose dreams are arranged, and whose visions are enrolled and
registered.
Their virtues, O God, are measured, their sins are weighed,
and even the countless things that pass in the dim twilight of neither sin nor
virtue are recorded and catalogued.
Here days and night are divided into seasons of conduct and
governed by rules of blameless accuracy.
To eat, to drink, to sleep, to cover one’s nudity, and then
to be weary in due time.
To work, to play, to sing, to dance, and then to lie still
when the clock strikes the hour.
To think thus, to feel thus much, and then to cease thinking
and feeling when a certain star rises above yonder horizon.
To rob a neighbour with a smile, to bestow gifts with a
graceful wave of the hand, to praise prudently, to blame cautiously, to destroy
a sound with a word, to burn a body with a breath, and then to wash the hands
when the day’s work is done.
To love according to an established order, to entertain
one’s best self in a preconceived manner, to worship the gods becomingly, to
intrigue the devils artfully—and then to forget all as though memory were dead.
To fancy with a motive, to contemplate with consideration,
to be happy sweetly, to suffer nobly—and then to empty the cup so that tomorrow
may fill it again.
All these things, O God, are conceived with forethought,
born with determination, nursed with exactness, governed by rules, directed by
reason, and then slain and buried after a prescribed method. And even their
silent graves that lie within the human soul are marked and numbered.
It is a perfect world, a world of consummate excellence, a
world of supreme wonders, the ripest fruit in God’s garden, the master-thought
of the universe.
But why should I be here, O God, I a green seed of
unfulfilled passion, a mad tempest that seeketh neither east nor west, a
bewildered fragment from a burnt planet?
Why am I here, O God of lost souls, thou who art lost
amongst the gods?
Khalil Gibran
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