[584] History of the Night

Title : History of the Night
Poet : Jorge Luis Borges
Date : 23 Oct 2000
1stLine: Throughout the cours...
Length : 27 Text-only version  
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Guest poem submitted by Dr. Sudha Shastri <shastri@>

History of the Night
Throughout the course of the generations
men constructed the night.
At first she was blindness;
thorns raking bare feet,
fear of wolves.
We shall never know who forged the word
for the interval of shadow
dividing the two twilights;
we shall never know in what age it came to mean
the starry hours.
Others created the myth.
They made her the mother of the unruffled Fates
that spin our destiny,
they sacrificed black ewes to her, and the cock
who crows his own death.
The Chaldeans assigned to her twelve houses;
to Zeno, infinite words.
She took shape from Latin hexameters
and the terror of Pascal.
Luis de Leon saw in her the homeland
of his stricken soul.
Now we feel her to be inexhaustible
like an ancient wine
and no one can gaze on her without vertigo
and time has charged her with eternity.

And to think that she wouldn't exist
except for those fragile instruments, the eyes.

	-- Jorge Luis Borges


This is a poem I stumbled upon while hunting for magic realist narratives. I
responded instinctively with liking, and am sending it even though I have
not checked some of the allusions in the poem (such as the Chaldeans and the
terror of Pascal).

It also reminded me of Joseph Blanco White's poem on Night.

Sudha Shastri

Links:

The Joseph Blanco White poem can be found at
http://www.library.utoronto.ca/utel/rp/poems/whitejb1b.html

For a Borges biography and assessment see poem #401

From: "Tim Carey" <Tim_Carey@>

Pascal's quote is "... terorrem potius quam religionem..."
 "Terror which is more powerful than religion."
 reference:  http://www.mala.bc.ca/~mcneil/PEN03.HTM