The Fall
There is no where in you a paradise that is no place and
there
You do not enter except without a story.
To enter there is to
become unnameable.
Whoever is nowhere is nobody, and therefore cannot
exist except as unborn: No disguise will avail him anything.
Such a one
is neither lost nor found.
But he who has an address is lost.
They
fall, they fall into apartments and are securely established!
They find
themselves in streets. They are licensed
To proceed from place to
place.
They now know their own names.
They can name several friends
and know
Their own telephones must some time ring.
If all telephones
ring at once, if all names are shouted at once and all cars crash at one
crossing:
If all cities explode and fly away in dust,
Yet identities
refuse to be lost. There is a name and a number for everyone.
There is a
definite place for bodies, there are pigeon holes for ashes:
Such security
can business buy!
Who would dare to go nameless in so secure a
universe?
Yet, to tell the truth, only the nameless are at home in
it.
They bear with them in the center of nowhere the unborn flower of
nothing:
This is the paradise tree. It must remain unseen until words end
and arguments are silent.
Thomas Merton
(1915 - 1968)