László Krasznahorkai - Drifter Standing
To accompany material exhibited by Balázs Kicsiny for the Venice Biennale

We have to leave this place because it's not somewhere we can live or is worth staying in, because we must escape its impossible, unbearable, cold, sad, dreary, mortal weight, grab our suitcase, particularly the suitcase, two suitcases will do just fine, pack everything into them, click the locks, and dash to the shoe-shop where it's tap, tap, tap, on our soles and heels, and then more tapping, because it's boots we need, a pair of boots, above all else a good stout pair of boots and two suitcases, and that should do, that's enough to hit the road with, in so far as we know - since this is the first time we've been in this position - where precisely we are right now, and it needs talent to know that, empirical knowledge, not some vague sense of direction or a foggy notion deep in our hearts to decide where we happen to be, in the light of which knowledge we may choose the right path by instinct and as sure of our choice as if we had some peculiar decision-making instrument to hand, an instrument that informed us precisely where we stood in terms of space, that point being, in historical terms, at a particularly impossible, unbearable, cold, sad, dreary mortal intersection that we have to leave because it isn't a place where a man can find ways of living or remaining, a man at this treacherously marshy, worryingly dark point in space being utterly incapable of doing anything except declaring that it is time to go, to leave immediately, to set off without giving the matter a thought and not look back, keeping his eyes firmly on the road ahead, the road selected earlier, the one, naturally, that goes in the right direction, to choose which never seems in the least difficult, unless it turns out that this empirical knowledge, the unique instinct that helped identify the co-ordinates of this sad, mortal etcetera point in space, had simply said that that's how it would be under what they call 'normal circumstances', though that's simply the way it goes in particularly difficult situations such as ours, meaning we have to choose to set off either this way or that way from a certain point, in other words in either this or that right direction, it's just that there are circumstances, referred to as 'abnormal circumstances' when this instinct, this justifiably highly-regarded empirical knowledge, tells us that the direction we have chosen is good, and that therefore this or that decision is the right one, but, at the same time and according to the same instinct, that the contrary is also true, and that's how this condition of the drifter standing arises, for there he stands, a man with two heavy suitcases in his hand, in a pair of perfectly soled and heeled walking boots, and he could go right without being mistaken or left without being mistaken, and when this plain contradiction involving opposite directions seems a proper state of affairs to him, and all his instincts tell him he is right to believe this to be a proper state of affairs if for no other reason than that the act of weighing these two wholly contrary directions is subject to the power of desire inscribed within the sphere of empirical knowledge, in other words that the decision 'go right' is equal in value to the decision 'go left' because either direction promises uninterrupted progress towards the most distant, most desired location, a location that is as far away from here as it is possible to be, even though any attainable point in the given direction is no longer determined by instinct, empirical knowledge or indeed capacity, not by any of these things, not in the least, but by desire alone, a desire not only to locate oneself at the maximum distance from one's current situation but also at the point that promises most, where he may find the most complete reassurance, because reassurance is what this is all about, reassurance being what man is seeking in the desired distance, reassurance after the unspeakably oppressive, painful, insane anxiety that takes hold of him each time he considers his current situation which is the spot, that infinitely alien territory, he happens to occupy at present but must leave, because everything about it is impossible, unbearable, cold, sad, dreary and deadly, a spot from which he cannot move, not from his first arrival there to the moment of trauma, not once he realizes that he is truly traumatized, once he discovers his being is bound hand and foot, and is bound precisely because of his otherwise faultlessly functioning normal instinct that is pointing in two opposite directions at once and telling him to get going, that everything is fine, for how can one set off in two opposite directions at once, that is the question, and the question won't go away, so he remains in that spot as if had been anchored there like some rusty hulk and stands bent under the weight of his luggage, stationary, not moving an inch, and so, standing not moving an inch he tries to set off blindly in some direction, it is no longer important which, but moves not an inch, and yet he is miles away and has begun drifting in the land of the blind, for while he remains perfectly still in reality, his bent body, like a statue, lodged ever more firmly in the realm that no one leaves, his being is everywhere to be encountered, for he is visible night and day, known in America, acknowledged in Asia, recognized in Europe and in Africa as he drifts over mountains, down river valleys, as he moves and moves and never rests while drifting, not for a single night, only for an hour or two, and even then he sleeps lightly like an animal, like a soldier, and never asks anything nor looks at anyone too long, and people ask him, what are you doing you fool, where are you going with that mad look in your eyes, why don't you sit down and rest, close your eyes and spend the night here, but he does not sit down and does not rest because he doesn't stay the night or stay anywhere for any length of time, because he says, that is if he talks at all, that he has to be constantly moving and it's perfectly obvious that there was no point in the first place asking him where this forced march was headed, because he couldn't say anything, for he himself no longer knows what he might have known once, back then, when he was still standing there with two heavy suitcases in his hands about to set off into the land of the blind which is for him a land without roads, so he could never truly be said to be on the road to anywhere, and he looked like some pathetic ghost incapable of frightening anybody, and no one would have thought of scaring children with him, nor did anyone mumble his name in church praying he might not pass through town but simply shrugged whenever he appeared here or there, as if to say, here he is again, for he appeared time and again in America and Asia, time and again in Europe and in Africa, and people began to think he was going round and round in circles, circling the world like the hands of a clock and if his presence now and then seemed to be of significance, much as a pathetic ghost might be, by the time he came round the second, the third or the fourth time they simply shrugged and, frankly, no one was interested, and so the occasions on which they might have tried to ask him something, or offer him a place, or put out a dish of food out for him grew ever rarer, just as with the passage of time they grew ever more reluctant to receive him into their houses because who knows, they said among themselves, what all this adds up to, though it was clear that they had simply grown bored of him, terminally bored, since, unlike a clock, he did not indicate anything and signified nothing, and, what most disturbed the world, if the world was disturbed at all, was that this man, from beginning to end, had understood nothing, just kept walking and was worth nothing at all to anyone, and so it came to pass that one day, when his drifting in the world was no longer noticed at all, he disappeared, the stuff of which he was composed simply disintegrating and he was merely an absence in the world, which is to say they forgot him, though that did not mean, not for a second, that he had begun to vanish from the realm of reality because he very much remained there and was tirelessly moving between America, Asia, Africa and Europe and it was only that the connection between him and the world had been broken and so, being forgotten, that he had become invisible and this meant that he was eternally alone, which was the point at which he noticed, at certain points in his drifting, that there were other detached figures in the story, figures as detached as he was, figures very much like the image he would have seen in a mirror, which gave him a shock at first, and he quickly left the cities or regions in which he encountered them, though after a time he forgot to look away from these peculiar figures and began to examine them, seeking the difference between his features and theirs, but as time passed and fate brought him into contact with ever more of these detached drifters, it became ever clearer that their suitcases were just the same, as were their bent backs, the whole way they bore the weight and moved painfully forward down this or that direction, that they were all very similar, and soon enough not merely similar but truly detached in precisely the same way, right down to the boots with their new soles, and he also noticed one time he went into some large hall to get a drink of water, that the work on their soles was just as professional as on his, and the blood ran cold in his veins as he saw the entire hall was full of people exactly like himself, so he quickly drank his water down and left the town as soon as he could, and not only the town but the entire region, and never set foot there again, or indeed anywhere he thought or felt that he might meet such drifting figures, in other words he began to avoid them from that time forth and so remained terminally alone and his drifting lost its peculiar and insanely arbitrary quality but he still continued tirelessly, and a whole new era began in his drifting because he was sure that it was only by having made the decision to enter a maze, to squeeze himself into it, that he could avoid, as far as possible, detached figures like himself, and so it was only from this time onwards the dreams began, for he would sleep in wholly arbitrary places and at wholly arbitrary times, briefly and lightly, and in one of these rare brief and light bouts of sleep he began to dream as never before, dream precisely the same dream every time, a dream about the time of his drifting having come to an end, in which he saw a huge clock or wheel or some spinning mechanism, in any case that he had reached one of these or a combination of all of them, and he stepped into his clock, or into the wheel or into the mechanism, stopped at its very centre in the very same state of inexpressible exhaustion in which he had spent his entire life, fell to the ground as if he had been shot, keeled over like a collapsing tower, and lay on his side where he fell so that he might sleep at last like an animal worn to the bone with exhaustion, and the same dream began again every time he laid his head down in some quiet corner or found some berth, exactly the same dream time and time again, though he should have been seeing something completely different, if only he could raise his eyes, if only he could have raised the head that was constantly hanging through all those decades of drifting, because then he would have seen that he was still standing there with two suitcases in his hands, with those well heeled and soled boots on his feet, anchored to the small patch of ground on which he stood, so that he had no hope of ever moving from there because he had to stand there till the end of time, suspended between two perfectly correct directions, condemned to stand there till the end of time because this spot was his home, where he had been born, and where he had to die, his home that was so sad and so cold.

Translated by George Szirtes