“For it is not enough to have memories. Memories are not enough. One must be able to forget them when they are many, and possess the great patience of waiting for them to return. For memories themselves are not yet what matters. Only when they have become in us blood, glance, gesture; when they no longer have a name and can no longer be distinguished from ourselves, only then may it happen that, at a very rare hour, from their midst, the first word of a poem arises.”
Rainer Maria Rilke, The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge
Where the possibility unfolds that there may exist memories that belong to no event at all.
Félix's Notebook
The Moon Child has been walking for so long that, at times, it seems to him he never truly began his journey. He seeks neither a lost place nor a vanished age. What he carries within him has never really belonged to the past. It is something else: a hidden fidelity to a presence from which every step carries him farther away. For there are distances that do not erase; they reveal.
As long as one remains entirely immersed in a reality, nothing detaches itself from it. Nothing can yet become memory. How could one remember what wholly envelops us? A distance must open, however slight, before that strange light we call memory can come into being. Thus the Moon Child does not retain the memory of the whole because he remained within it. He remembers it because he is forever moving away from it. He could never say what that primordial wholeness was. It possessed neither outline nor face, nor even that unity which we now call the world. There was not yet a world, for a world already presupposes the existence of something that is not itself. There were not yet images, for every image is already a willing separation, a form consenting to emerge from a background. There may not even have been being itself, if by being we already mean a word capable of distinguishing what is from what is not.
There was only a presence so complete that it could not yet know itself.
The Moon Child therefore does not remember it as one remembers a house once inhabited. Rather, he experiences its silent resonance, like those musical harmonies whose vibration the ear continues to perceive long after the instrument itself has fallen silent. What remains within him is not an image, but a way of being touched by that which can no longer return.
As he continues walking, the world gradually becomes populated. Paths distinguish themselves from cliffs, trees from rocks, faces from crowds, words from silence. Every act of recognition lends a new precision to his universe. Every word illuminates a difference that had until then remained unnoticed. Reality gains in definition what it loses in indivision.
Behind his smiling mask, the Moon Child seems to welcome these distinctions with the serene gravity of one who knows they are necessary. Yet at the very heart of each one, he sometimes seems to hear a quiet summons, as though every newly emerged thing still preserved, deep within itself, the memory of that from which it had once separated.
Perhaps that is why he drew... and why he still draws.
He does not seek to reproduce the world, nor even to remain faithful to it in the way a mirror appears faithful to what it reflects. Rather, in every image he tries to preserve something of that primordial unity which visible forms endlessly divide. He draws as others listen to an echo, with the secret hope that the world's fragmentation may still allow an older breath to pass between two lines.
At such moments he lifts his eyes toward the moon.
It possesses no light of its own. It receives the light of another star, yet never in its entirety. Part of that light always escapes it; another part always remains in shadow. And yet perhaps it is precisely through this incompleteness that the moon becomes visible. A total light would blind us; a reflected light accompanies us.
The Moon Child resembles that reflected radiance.
He carries neither the whole, nor does he illuminate it—for no one could. Yet he gathers a fragile gleam that refuses to die out. The more precisely the world defines itself, the more precious that gleam becomes. The more things acquire their names, the more silently it reminds us that before every separation, before images, before words, before even that strange habit we have acquired of saying the world, there existed a presence distinguished from nothing, because, without yet knowing it, it still contained every distinction that was to come.
.
As long as one remains entirely immersed in a reality, nothing detaches itself from it. Nothing can yet become memory. How could one remember what wholly envelops us? A distance must open, however slight, before that strange light we call memory can come into being. Thus the Moon Child does not retain the memory of the whole because he remained within it. He remembers it because he is forever moving away from it. He could never say what that primordial wholeness was. It possessed neither outline nor face, nor even that unity which we now call the world. There was not yet a world, for a world already presupposes the existence of something that is not itself. There were not yet images, for every image is already a willing separation, a form consenting to emerge from a background. There may not even have been being itself, if by being we already mean a word capable of distinguishing what is from what is not.
There was only a presence so complete that it could not yet know itself.
The Moon Child therefore does not remember it as one remembers a house once inhabited. Rather, he experiences its silent resonance, like those musical harmonies whose vibration the ear continues to perceive long after the instrument itself has fallen silent. What remains within him is not an image, but a way of being touched by that which can no longer return.
As he continues walking, the world gradually becomes populated. Paths distinguish themselves from cliffs, trees from rocks, faces from crowds, words from silence. Every act of recognition lends a new precision to his universe. Every word illuminates a difference that had until then remained unnoticed. Reality gains in definition what it loses in indivision.
Behind his smiling mask, the Moon Child seems to welcome these distinctions with the serene gravity of one who knows they are necessary. Yet at the very heart of each one, he sometimes seems to hear a quiet summons, as though every newly emerged thing still preserved, deep within itself, the memory of that from which it had once separated.
Perhaps that is why he drew... and why he still draws.
He does not seek to reproduce the world, nor even to remain faithful to it in the way a mirror appears faithful to what it reflects. Rather, in every image he tries to preserve something of that primordial unity which visible forms endlessly divide. He draws as others listen to an echo, with the secret hope that the world's fragmentation may still allow an older breath to pass between two lines.
At such moments he lifts his eyes toward the moon.
It possesses no light of its own. It receives the light of another star, yet never in its entirety. Part of that light always escapes it; another part always remains in shadow. And yet perhaps it is precisely through this incompleteness that the moon becomes visible. A total light would blind us; a reflected light accompanies us.
The Moon Child resembles that reflected radiance.
He carries neither the whole, nor does he illuminate it—for no one could. Yet he gathers a fragile gleam that refuses to die out. The more precisely the world defines itself, the more precious that gleam becomes. The more things acquire their names, the more silently it reminds us that before every separation, before images, before words, before even that strange habit we have acquired of saying the world, there existed a presence distinguished from nothing, because, without yet knowing it, it still contained every distinction that was to come.
.
