My speech is going to be a long journey, a trip that I have taken through regions that are distant and antipodean, but not for that reason any less similar to the landscape and the solitude in Scandinavia. I refer to the way in which my country stretches down to the extreme South. So remote are we Chileans that our boundaries almost touch the South Pole, recalling the geography of Sweden, whose head reaches the snowy northern region of this planet.
 Down there on those vast expanses in my native country, where I   was taken by events which have already fallen into oblivion, one   has to cross, and I was compelled to cross, the Andes to find the   frontier of my country with Argentina. Great forests make these   inaccessible areas like a tunnel through which our journey was   secret and forbidden, with only the faintest signs to show us the   way. There were no tracks and no paths, and I and my four   companions, riding on horseback, pressed forward on our tortuous   way, avoiding the obstacles set by huge trees, impassable rivers,   immense cliffs and desolate expanses of snow, blindly seeking the   quarter in which my own liberty lay. Those who were with me knew   how to make their way forward between the dense leaves of the   forest, but to feel safer they marked their route by slashing   with their machetes here and there in the bark of the great   trees, leaving tracks which they would follow back when they had   left me alone with my destiny.
Each of us made his way forward filled with this limitless   solitude, with the green and white silence of trees and huge   trailing plants and layers of soil laid down over centuries,   among half-fallen tree trunks which suddenly appeared as fresh   obstacles to bar our progress. We were in a dazzling and secret   world of nature which at the same time was a growing menace of   cold, snow and persecution. Everything became one: the solitude,   the danger, the silence, and the urgency of my mission.
Sometimes we followed a very faint trail, perhaps left by   smugglers or ordinary criminals in flight, and we did not know   whether many of them had perished, surprised by the icy hands of   winter, by the fearful snowstorms which suddenly rage in the   Andes and engulf the traveller, burying him under a whiteness   seven stories high.
On either side of the trail I could observe in the wild   desolation something which betrayed human activity. There were   piled up branches which had lasted out many winters, offerings   made by hundreds who had journeyed there, crude burial mounds in   memory of the fallen, so that the passer should think of those   who had not been able to struggle on but had remained there under   the snow for ever. My comrades, too, hacked off with their   machetes branches which brushed our heads and bent down over us   from the colossal trees, from oaks whose last leaves were   scattering before the winter storms. And I too left a tribute at   every mound, a visiting card of wood, a branch from the forest to   deck one or other of the graves of these unknown   travelers.
We had to cross a river. Up on the Andean summits there run small   streams which cast themselves down with dizzy and insane force,   forming waterfalls that stir up earth and stones with the   violence they bring with them from the heights. But this time we   found calm water, a wide mirror-like expanse which could be   forded. The horses splashed in, lost their foothold and began to   swim towards the other bank. Soon my horse was almost completely   covered by the water, I began to plunge up and down without   support, my feet fighting desperately while the horse struggled   to keep its head above water. Then we got across. And hardly we   reached the further bank when the seasoned country-folk with me   asked me with scarce-concealed smiles:
"Were you frightened?"
"Very. I thought my last hour had come", I said.
"We were behind you with our lassoes in our hands", they   answered.
"Just there", added one of them, "my father fell and was swept   away by the current. That didn't happen to you."
We continued till we came to a natural tunnel which perhaps had   been bored through the imposing rocks by some mighty vanished   river or created by some tremor of the earth when these heights   had been formed, a channel that we entered where it had been   carved out in the rock in granite. After only a few steps our   horses began to slip when they sought for a foothold in the   uneven surfaces of the stone and their legs were bent, sparks   flying from beneath their iron shoes - several times I expected   to find myself thrown off and lying there on the rock. My horse   was bleeding from its muzzle and from its legs, but we persevered   and continued on the long and difficult but magnificent   path.
There was something awaiting us in the midst of this wild   primeval forest. Suddenly, as if in a strange vision, we came to   a beautiful little meadow huddled among the rocks: clear water,   green grass, wild flowers, the purling of brooks and the blue   heaven above, a generous stream of light unimpeded by   leaves.
There we stopped as if within a magic circle, as if guests within   some hallowed place, and the ceremony I now took part in had   still more the air of something sacred. The cowherds dismounted   from their horses. In the midst of the space, set up as if in a   rite, was the skull of an ox. In silence the men approached it   one after the other and put coins and food in the eye sockets of   the skull. I joined them in this sacrifice intended for stray   travelers, all kinds of refugees who would find bread and   succour in the dead ox's eye sockets.
But the unforgettable ceremony did not end there. My country   friends took off their hats and began a strange dance, hopping on   one foot around the abandoned skull, moving in the ring of   footprints left behind by the many others who had passed there   before them. Dimly I understood, there by the side of my   inscrutable companions, that there was a kind of link between   unknown people, a care, an appeal and an answer even in the most   distant and isolated solitude of this world.
Further on, just before we reached the frontier which was to   divide me from my native land for many years, we came at night to   the last pass between the mountains. Suddenly we saw the glow of   a fire as a sure sign of a human presence, and when we came   nearer we found some half-ruined buildings, poor hovels which   seemed to have been abandoned. We went into one of them and saw   the glow of fire from tree trunks burning in the middle of the   floor, carcasses of huge trees, which burnt there day and night   and from which came smoke that made its way up through the cracks   in the roof and rose up like a deep-blue veil in the midst of the   darkness. We saw mountains of stacked cheeses, which are made by   the people in these high regions. Near the fire lay a number of   men grouped like sacks. In the silence we could distinguish the   notes of a guitar and words in a song which was born of the   embers and the darkness, and which carried with it the first   human voice we had encountered during our journey. It was a song   of love and distance, a cry of love and longing for the distant   spring, from the towns we were coming away from, for life in its   limitless extent. These men did not know who we were, they knew   nothing about our flight, they had never heard either my name or   my poetry; or perhaps they did, perhaps they knew us? What   actually happened was that at this fire we sang and we ate, and   then in the darkness we went into some primitive rooms. Through   them flowed a warm stream, volcanic water in which we bathed,   warmth which welled out from the mountain chain and received us   in its bosom.
Happily we splashed about, dug ourselves out, as it were,   liberated ourselves from the weight of the long journey on   horseback. We felt refreshed, reborn, baptised, when in the dawn   we started on the journey of a few miles which was to eclipse me   from my native land. We rode away on our horses singing, filled   with a new air, with a force that cast us out on to the world's   broad highway which awaited me. This I remember well, that when   we sought to give the mountain dwellers a few coins in gratitude   for their songs, for the food, for the warm water, for giving us   lodging and beds, I would rather say for the unexpected heavenly   refuge that had met us on our journey, our offering was rejected   out of hand. They had been at our service, nothing more. In this   taciturn "nothing" there were hidden things that were understood,   perhaps a recognition, perhaps the same kind of dreams.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I did not learn from books any recipe for writing a poem, and I, in my turn, will avoid giving any advice on mode or style which might give the new poets even a drop of supposed insight. When I am recounting in this speech something about past events, when reliving on this occasion a never-forgotten occurrence, in this place which is so different from what that was, it is because in the course of my life I have always found somewhere the necessary support, the formula which had been waiting for me not in order to be petrified in my words but in order to explain me to myself.During this long journey I found the necessary components for the   making of the poem. There I received contributions from the earth   and from the soul. And I believe that poetry is an action,   ephemeral or solemn, in which there enter as equal partners   solitude and solidarity, emotion and action, the nearness to   oneself, the nearness to mankind and to the secret manifestations   of nature. And no less strongly I think that all this is   sustained - man and his shadow, man and his conduct, man and his   poetry - by an ever-wider sense of community, by an effort which   will for ever bring together the reality and the dreams in us   because it is precisely in this way that poetry unites and   mingles them. And therefore I say that I do not know, after so   many years, whether the lessons I learned when I crossed a   daunting river, when I danced around the skull of an ox, when I   bathed my body in the cleansing water from the topmost heights -   I do not know whether these lessons welled forth from me in order   to be imparted to many others or whether it was all a message   which was sent to me by others as a demand or an accusation. I do   not know whether I experienced this or created it, I do not know   whether it was truth or poetry, something passing or permanent,   the poems I experienced in this hour, the experiences which I   later put into verse.
From all this, my friends, there arises an insight which the poet   must learn through other people. There is no insurmountable   solitude. All paths lead to the same goal: to convey to others   what we are. And we must pass through solitude and difficulty,   isolation and silence in order to reach forth to the enchanted   place where we can dance our clumsy dance and sing our sorrowful   song - but in this dance or in this song there are fulfilled the   most ancient rites of our conscience in the awareness of being   human and of believing in a common destiny.
The truth is that even if some or many consider me to be a   sectarian, barred from taking a place at the common table of   friendship and responsibility, I do not wish to defend myself,   for I believe that neither accusation nor defence is among the   tasks of the poet. When all is said, there is no individual poet   who administers poetry, and if a poet sets himself up to accuse   his fellows or if some other poet wastes his life in defending   himself against reasonable or unreasonable charges, it is my   conviction that only vanity can so mislead us. I consider the   enemies of poetry to be found not among those who practise poetry   or guard it but in mere lack of agreement in the poet. For this   reason no poet has any considerable enemy other than his own   incapacity to make himself understood by the most forgotten and   exploited of his contemporaries, and this applies to all epochs   and in all countries.
The poet is not a "little god". No, he is not a "little god". He   is not picked out by a mystical destiny in preference to those   who follow other crafts and professions. I have often maintained   that the best poet is he who prepares our daily bread: the   nearest baker who does not imagine himself to be a god. He does   his majestic and unpretentious work of kneading the dough,   consigning it to the oven, baking it in golden colours and   handing us our daily bread as a duty of fellowship. And, if the   poet succeeds in achieving this simple consciousness, this too   will be transformed into an element in an immense activity, in a   simple or complicated structure which constitutes the building of   a community, the changing of the conditions which surround   mankind, the handing over of mankind's products: bread, truth,   wine, dreams. If the poet joins this never-completed struggle to   extend to the hands of each and all his part of his undertaking,   his effort and his tenderness to the daily work of all people,   then the poet must take part, the poet will take part, in the   sweat, in the bread, in the wine, in the whole dream of humanity.   Only in this indispensable way of being ordinary people shall we   give back to poetry the mighty breadth which has been pared away   from it little by little in every epoch, just as we ourselves   have been whittled down in every epoch.
The mistakes which led me to a relative truth and the truths   which repeatedly led me back to the mistakes did not allow me -   and I never made any claims to it - to find my way to lead, to   learn what is called the creative process, to reach the heights   of literature that are so difficult of access. But one thing I   realized - that it is we ourselves who call forth the spirits   through our own myth-making. From the matter we use, or wish to   use, there arise later on obstacles to our own development and   the future development. We are led infallibly to reality and   realism, that is to say to become indirectly conscious of   everything that surrounds us and of the ways of change, and then   we see, when it seems to be late, that we have erected such an   exaggerated barrier that we are killing what is alive instead of   helping life to develop and blossom. We force upon ourselves a   realism which later proves to be more burdensome than the bricks   of the building, without having erected the building which we had   regarded as an indispensable part of our task. And, in the   contrary case, if we succeed in creating the fetish of the   incomprehensible (or the fetish of that which is comprehensible   only to a few), the fetish of the exclusive and the secret, if we   exclude reality and its realistic degenerations, then we find   ourselves suddenly surrounded by an impossible country, a   quagmire of leaves, of mud, of cloud, where our feet sink in and   we are stifled by the impossibility of communicating.
As far as we in particular are concerned, we writers within the   tremendously far-flung American region, we listen unceasingly to   the call to fill this mighty void with beings of flesh and blood.   We are conscious of our duty as fulfillers - at the same time we   are faced with the unavoidable task of critical communication   within a world which is empty and is not less full of injustices,   punishments and sufferings because it is empty - and we feel also   the responsibility for reawakening the old dreams which sleep in   statues of stone in the ruined ancient monuments, in the   wide-stretching silence in planetary plains, in dense primeval   forests, in rivers which roar like thunder. We must fill with   words the most distant places in a dumb continent and we are   intoxicated by this task of making fables and giving names. This   is perhaps what is decisive in my own humble case, and if so my   exaggerations or my abundance or my rhetoric would not be   anything other than the simplest of events within the daily work   of an American. Each and every one of my verses has chosen to   take its place as a tangible object, each and every one of my   poems has claimed to be a useful working instrument, each and   every one of my songs has endeavoured to serve as a sign in space   for a meeting between paths which cross one another, or as a   piece of stone or wood on which someone, some others, those who   follow after, will be able to carve the new signs.
By extending to these extreme consequences the poet's duty, in   truth or in error, I determined that my posture within the   community and before life should be that of in a humble way   taking sides. I decided this when I saw so many honourable   misfortunes, lone victories, splendid defeats. In the midst of   the arena of America's struggles I saw that my human task was   none other than to join the extensive forces of the organized   masses of the people, to join with life and soul with suffering   and hope, because it is only from this great popular stream that   the necessary changes can arise for the authors and for the   nations. And even if my attitude gave and still gives rise to   bitter or friendly objections, the truth is that I can find no   other way for an author in our far-flung and cruel countries, if   we want the darkness to blossom, if we are concerned that the   millions of people who have learnt neither to read us nor to read   at all, who still cannot write or write to us, are to feel at   home in the area of dignity without which it is impossible for   them to be complete human beings.
We have inherited this damaged life of peoples dragging behind   them the burden of the condemnation of centuries, the most   paradisaical of peoples, the purest, those who with stones and   metals made marvellous towers, jewels of dazzling brilliance -   peoples who were suddenly despoiled and silenced in the fearful   epochs of colonialism which still linger on.
Our original guiding stars are struggle and hope. But there is no   such thing as a lone struggle, no such thing as a lone hope. In   every human being are combined the most distant epochs,   passivity, mistakes, sufferings, the pressing urgencies of our   own time, the pace of history. But what would have become of me   if, for example, I had contributed in some way to the maintenance   of the feudal past of the great American continent? How should I   then have been able to raise my brow, illuminated by the honour   which Sweden has conferred on me, if I had not been able to feel   some pride in having taken part, even to a small extent, in the   change which has now come over my country? It is necessary to   look at the map of America, to place oneself before its splendid   multiplicity, before the cosmic generosity of the wide places   which surround us, in order to understand why many writers refuse   to share the dishonour and plundering of the past, of all that   which dark gods have taken away from the American peoples.
I chose the difficult way of divided responsibility and, rather   than to repeat the worship of the individual as the sun and   centre of the system, I have preferred to offer my services in   all modesty to an honourable army which may from time to time   commit mistakes but which moves forward unceasingly and struggles   every day against the anachronism of the refractory and the   impatience of the opinionated. For I believe that my duties as a   poet involve friendship not only with the rose and with symmetry,   with exalted love and endless longing, but also with unrelenting   human occupations which I have incorporated into my poetry.
It is today exactly one hundred years since an unhappy and   brilliant poet, the most awesome of all despairing souls, wrote   down this prophecy: "A l'aurore, armés d'une ardente   patience, nous entrerons aux splendides Villes." "In the dawn,   armed with a burning patience, we shall enter the splendid   Cities."
I believe in this prophecy of Rimbaud, the Visionary. I come from   a dark region, from a land separated from all others by the steep   contours of its geography. I was the most forlorn of poets and my   poetry was provincial, oppressed and rainy. But always I had put   my trust in man. I never lost hope. It is perhaps because of this   that I have reached as far as I now have with my poetry and also   with my banner.
Lastly, I wish to say to the people of good will, to the workers,   to the poets, that the whole future has been expressed in this   line by Rimbaud: only with a burning patience can we   conquer the splendid City which will give light, justice and   dignity to all mankind.
In this way the song will not have been sung in vain.
From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1968-1980, Editor-in-Charge Tore Frängsmyr, Editor Sture Allén, World Scientific Publishing Co., Singapore, 1993
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