Beyond the Past: Finding Radical Intimacy in Pablo Neruda’s “Always”
Is true love the erasure of a partner’s history, or the courage to stand amidst the wreckage of it? Pablo Neruda’s “Always” challenges our possessive instincts, transforming the “baggage” of the past into a river that leads, inevitably, to a singular, present shore.
Always
Pablo Neruda
I am not jealous
of what came before me.
Come with a man
on your shoulders,
come with a hundred men in your hair,
come with a thousand men between your breasts and your feet,
come like a river
full of drowned men
which flows down to the wild sea,
to the eternal surf, to Time!
Bring them all
to where I am waiting for you;
we shall always be alone,
we shall always be you and I
alone on earth,
to start our life!
Neruda’s “Always” is a masterclass in radical presence. Rather than succumbing to the common human frailty of retrospective jealousy, the speaker demands the entirety of the beloved—ghosts and all. By using the imagery of a “river full of drowned men,” Neruda acknowledges that our past experiences, however heavy or numerous, are exactly what carry us toward our current destination.
The poem suggests that intimacy isn’t found by wiping the slate clean, but by standing together at the “eternal surf” where the past finally dissolves into the “Always” of the couple. It is a bold, transformative reclaim of the self.
As you read this poem, ask yourself:
Does loving someone truly require forgetting who they were before you, or is the deepest form of intimacy found in being the person who finally makes their past feel like a distant shore?