You might not think to ask a
man who died in 1935 to be your guide round a busy city of today. Unless,
perhaps, the city is Lisbon and your prospective guide is the poet and
writer Fernando Pessoa.
Fernando Pessoa wrote a guide
book in English around 1925 specifically to fight what he called
Portugal’s "demotion" from great European capital to
small-country city. However, he never published the book; it was
uncovered in 1987 among the thousands of folios of his works at the
National Library.
Lisbon publishers Livros
Horizonte are responsible for this good looking 1992 edition in English
and Portuguese, published with financial support from Lisbon City
Council.
Fernando Pessoa was born in
Lisbon in 1888 on the fourth floor flat in the Largo de São Carlos,
just off the Chiado. His father died when Fernando was five years old
and he moved to South Africa with his mother when she married the
Portuguese Consul in Durban two years later. It was in Durban that
Pessoa learned English.
Pessoa returned to Lisbon in
1905 and never left. In her informative preface to the book, Teresa Rita
Lopes writes "For Pessoa, Lisbon was more than a city - it was a
country in condensed form. After dropping his anchor there in 1905, he
never left again. So much did he dream of Lisbon and - far away (when in
Africa) mythify it, that he felt forsaken by its reality when he
eventually came back - eternally an orphan and without a country. But he
never stopped seeking the body that eluded him."
Seekers of a lyrical
description of Lisbon will be dissappointed by Pessoa’s plain style.
The text is the work of a journeyman carpenter and not the master
craftsman. However, accepting his intention to guide visitors up and
down the streets from church to theatre to monument, the book is almost
as relevant today as it might have been if published all those years
ago. Not very many of the sights to be seen have changed, though the
pace of life and character of the city are altering daily. And the
visitor’s first impression of Lisbon has changed radically.
"For the traveller who
comes in from the sea, Lisbon, even from afar, rises like a fair vision
in a dream, clear-cut against a bright blue sky which the sun gladdens
with its gold. And the domes, the monuments, the old castles jut up
above the mass of houses, like far-off heralds of this delightful seat,
of this blessed region," wrote Pessoa on the opening page of his
guide.
Almost all today’s visitors
arrive in this "blessed region" by air; dropping out of the
sky to notice, not the city’s domes and monuments, but its sprawling
suburban housing blocks. Pessoa’s Lisbon stopped far short of today’s
city limit; he describes the zoo as being outside the city while it is
now just a metro station (Sete Rios) on the line to Colegio Militar.
It is curious to wonder how the
balance of space for each subject might reflect Pessoa’s own
priorities; the Baroque extravagance of the Church of Madre de Deus (in
Xabregas) is mentioned in only four lines. The Artillery Museum (located
next to Santa Apolonia station and now called the military museum) gets
one page. The Alfama is mentioned for only one paragraph.
The book is sprinkled with gems
of little-known human interest which no visitor should be without; that
the Bishop of Lisbon Dom Martinho Annes was thrown from one of the
towers of the Sé (Cathedral) during an uprising in 1388.
For the evening, Pessoa
suggests visitors should go to the "Clube dos Restauradores, better
known as Maxim’s." This restaurant was installed in the Palácio
Foz, the red and black building where the tourism office is now located.
The palace was built in the 17th century and renovated by the Marquis da
Foz in 1870.
In two pages of description,
Pessoa takes us through the "ample vestibule, sober and full of
dignity" and up the staircase of Italism marble. "The handrail
of the staircase, richly decorated in copper and steel, opens with a
sheep’s head in shinning copper. Other decorative motives follow, with
the crest of the noble family of the Marquises da Foz. This admirable
work - the handrail - was executed in Paris and cost no less than
£9,000."
Next time you are walking up
the Chiado take a good look at the statue of the poet Chiado in the
Largo das Duas Igrejas. Notice that he’s so excited in whatever he’s
declaiming that he’s about to fall off his stool. Pessoa comments of
this fellow poet: "poet Chiado is the name popularly given to a
16th century friar, António de Espirito Santo, who abandoned his habit
to become a sort of embodiment of the rollicking spirit of the times and
to develop into the favourite popular poet; his extant poems show
considerable merit."
Pessoa makes no mention of the
Brasileira café, where today’s romantic tradition pictures him with
friends or sitting alone. And where, of course, his own statue sits
outside mingling with tourists who may be reading his book written for
them. Such is still the world of Pessoa’s Lisboa.
"Lisboa, What the Tourist Should See - O
Que o Turista Deve Ver" by Fernando Pessoa. Published by Livros
Horizontes, Lisbon. Available in most bookshops.