[BNP/E3, 78 – 27-28]
Delirium.
Nirvâna.
A non-existence deeply within Being,
A sentient nothingness ethereal,
A more than real Ideality, agreeing
Of subject and of object, all in all.
Nor Life, nor Death, nor sense nor senselessness,
But a deep feeling of not feeling aught;
A calm how deep! ‑ much deeper than distress,
Haply as thinking is without the thought.
Beauty and ugliness, and love and hate,
Virtue and vice ‑ all these nowise will be;
That peace all quiet shall eliminate
Our everlasting life‑uncertainty.
A quietness of all our human hopes,
An end as of a feverish, tired breath...
For fit expressions vainly the soul gropes;
It is beyond the logic of our faith.
An opposite of joy's stir, of the deep
[28r]
Nirvâna – 2.
Disconsolation that our life doth give,
A waking to the slumber that we sleep,
A sleeping to the living that we live.
All difference unto the life we have,
All other to the thoughts that through us roam;
It is a home if our life be a grave,
It is a grave if our life be a home.
All that we weep, all to which we aspire
Is there, and like an infant on the breast,
We shall e'er be with more than we desire[1]
And our accursèd souls at last shall rest.
Alexander Search.
1906.
[1] We shall e'er be with more than we desire /transcend the little we desire\ /the plans of our desire\ /the cripple we desire\