Mirrors by Jorge Luis Borges

Production and Sound Design by Kevin Seaman

 

              Mirrors

By Jorge Luis Borges

 

I have been horrified before all mirrors

not just before the impenetrable glass,

the end and the beginning of that space,

inhabited by nothing but reflections,

 

but faced with specular water, mirroring

the other blue within its bottomless sky,

incised at times by the illusory flight

of inverted birds, or troubled by a ripple,

 

or face to face with the unspeaking surface

of ghostly ebony whose very hardness

reflects, as if within a dream, the whiteness

of spectral marble or a spectral rose.

 

Now, after so many troubling years

of wandering beneath the wavering moon,

I ask myself what accident of fortune

handed to me this terror of all mirrors–

 

mirrors of metal and the shrouded mirror

of sheer mahogany which in the twilight

of its uncertain red softens the face

that watches and in turn is watched by it.

 

I look on them as infinite, elemental

fulfillers of a very ancient pact

to multiply the world, as in the act

of generation, sleepless and dangerous.

 

They extenuate this vain and dubious world

within the web of their own vertigo.

Sometimes at evening they are clouded over

by someone's breath, someone who is not dead.

 

The glass is watching us. And if a mirror

hangs somewhere on the four walls of my room,

I am not alone. There's an other, a reflection

which in the dawn enacts its own dumb show.

 

Everything happens, nothing is remembered

in those dimensioned cabinets of glass

in which, like rabbits in fantastic stories,

we read the lines of text from right to left.

 

Claudius, king for an evening, king in a dream,

did not know he was a dream until the day

on which an actor mimed his felony

with silent artifice, in a tableau.

 

Strange, that there are dreams, that there are mirrors.

Strange that the ordinary, worn-out ways

of every day encompass the imagined

and endless universe woven by reflections.

 

God (I've begun to think) implants a promise

in all that insubstantial architecture

that makes light out of the impervious surface

of glass, and makes the shadow out of dreams.

 

God has created nights well-populated

with dreams, crowded with mirror images,

so that man may feel that he is nothing more

than vain reflection. That's what frightens us.

 

 

                       Spanish; trans. Alastair Reid

 

Production and Sound Design by Kevin Seaman

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