In the coastal village of Isla Negra, where the Pacific hurled its gray tantrums against black rocks, lived a young mailman named Matías. He was not a reader. He had never finished a poem. But his route included one peculiar stop: the ramshackle stone house of Don Pablo Neruda, the famous poet.
Matías delivered only one thing there each week: a single, sea-dampened envelope from Stockholm or Paris or Mexico City. Neruda, a great bear of a man with a belly that laughed before he did, would greet him at the door. But he never took the letter immediately. Instead, he’d sniff the air.
And somewhere, on a shelf in a stone house by the sea, a colored bottle trembled—as if a great, ghostly hand had just touched it and whispered, Exactly.
Years later, after the poet was gone, Matías stood alone on the same black rocks. He held a single, smooth marble in his palm. He had found it in a drain. The ocean was roaring now—or was it weeping? He wasn’t sure. don pablo neruda
Matías listened. He heard only wind and gravel. But Neruda grabbed his wrist and pulled him inside. The house was a shipwreck of wonders: a giant wooden horse, a ship’s figurehead, colored glass bottles catching the weak sun, and everywhere—books.
Matías became the postman of small things. Every day, he brought Neruda a crumb of ordinary life. And every day, Neruda gave him back a poem—spoken, not written—that turned that crumb into a constellation.
He opened his mouth and said to the wind, “Today, the ocean sounds like a man who taught a boy how to cry.” In the coastal village of Isla Negra, where
Neruda turned slowly. His smile was enormous. “Good. That’s very good. Now you are my postman too. You will bring me the world’s small news: a broken button, a dog’s three-legged walk, the way a woman’s hand hesitates before pouring tea.”
Neruda’s eyes crinkled. “No. Yesterday it was shouting. Today, it’s whispering a recipe. Listen.”
The next week, Matías returned. This time, he didn’t knock. He found Neruda on the terrace, staring at the sea. And Matías said, shyly, “Don Pablo… today the ocean sounds hungry.” But his route included one peculiar stop: the
“There,” Neruda said softly. “Now you know what the ocean was whispering. Sadness, Matías. A small, round sadness. Now go.”
“You deliver paper,” Neruda said, holding up the envelope. “But I want to pay you with something else. Sit.”
“Matías,” he said one afternoon, “what is the ocean saying today?”