G. Belenowsky
He was a chemist, and the author of "Zur Frage der Wirkung steriler Nahrung auf die Darmflora" (1907)
He was a chemist, and the author of "Zur Frage der Wirkung steriler Nahrung auf die Darmflora" (1907)
Chesterton study of allegorical painter, 1904
Chesterton, 1929
Solomon ibn Gabirol, Spanish-Jewish poet and philosopher, 1021-c.1058, also Abengabirol
Ibsen character
French writer of detective novels, 1835-73, author of Monsieur Lecoq and L'Affaire Lerouge
archangel
Hauptmann play, 1912
Spanish poet, 1870-1905
José Gabriel López Buisán, Spanish-born Argentine novelist and critic, 1896-1957, author of Evaristo Carriego, su vida y su obra, 1921
character in the film The Petrified Forest, 1936
park in Benares in Buddhist legend, also called "Parque de los Ciervos"
magazine
Argentine dramatist and essayist, 1891-1966, author of Glosario de la farsa urbana, Baile y filosofía and other works
Parodi: "el dramaturgo y ensayista argentino Roberto Gache (1891-1966) que en 1928, obtuvo el primer lugar en el Premio Municipal, sección prosa, con su obra París, glosario argentino; Borges, que había presentado al concurso El idioma de los argentinos, resultó segundo" (100).
port city in Italy north of Naples
Fishburn and Hughes: "A country of North Africa extending from the Atlas Mountains to the Atlantic coast. In the second century BC the people of Gaetulia joined Jugurtha (d.104 BC), king of Numidia, in his resistance to Rome. After the Mauretanians became Roman subjects in AD 40, the Romans made frequent sorties in Gaetulia. There was no proconsul in Gaetulia (the region was not entirely subordinated), yet the Gaetulians served in the auxiliary forces of the Roman Empire. The Inmortal." (75)
kinsman of Roland and husband of Charlemagne's daughter Melisenda, subject of many Spanish ballads
Parodi: 1) "un personaje legendario, presente ya en los romances viejos y retomado por Cervantes en el Quijote (Segunda parte, capítulo xxvi), que se lanza al rescate de su esposa Melisendra, cautiva entre los moros. Mencionado también en “Enfoque” §1" (102).
2) "“señor Gaiferos”: el apellido del delegado chaqueño al Congreso coincide con el de un personaje de la Segunda Parte del Quijote. En el Capítulo XXVI (“Donde se prosigue la graciosa aventura del titerero, con otras cosas en verdad harto buenas”), se narra la historia -sacada de las crónicas francesas y de los romances castellanos-, de la liberación de Melisendra, hija del emperador Carlomagno, que estaba cautiva en España en poder de los moros. Rescatada de su cautiverio por su esposo don Gaiferos, rey de Burdeos, pudo regresar a Francia. En la crónica de Bustos, Gaiferos es delegado al Congreso de Historiadores por “el Chaco”, nombre que se da a la región geográfica de Sudamérica, que se extiende por parte de los actuales territorios de la Argentina, Bolivia, Brasil y Paraguay, entre los ríos Paraguay y Paraná y el Altiplano andino. En Argentina, una de las 23 provincias que componen su territorio lleva el nombre de “Chaco” y está situada en esa región geográfica, en el nordeste del país. Gaiferos es mencionado también en “Sangiácomo” vi §11" (320).
Pied Piper of Hamelin, legendary figure who became the subject of a Browning poem
ancient region in Asia Minor, in Anatolian mountains of Turkey
knight in Arthurian legend
in Greek mythology, a nymph beloved of the cyclops Polyphemus
Cervantes pastoral novel, 1585.
Fishburn and Hughes: "Cervantes's first book, an eclogue, written in 1583 and published in 1585. It is said to relate indirectly to the story of the author's courtship of Catalina de Palacio, whom he married in 1584, and to include among its characters many contemporary writers disguised under pastoral names." (75)
character in Chesterton story
knife-fighter in Buenos Aires
art nouveau shopping arcade in central Buenos Aires
art gallery in Paris in the 1930s
Wales
city in Illinois
ancient Gaul, now France
northwestern region of Spain
Galilee, ancient province in Palestine.
Fishburn and Hughes: "A region in northern Israel, the northernmost district of ancient Palestine, extending from the Mediterranean to the river Jordan. Christ spent most of his early life in Galilee, where the greater part of his public ministry and most of his miracles took place." (75)
Italian astronomer and philosopher, 1564-1642
Favaro, 1949
Argentine poet associated with avant garde movements, author of Apuntes de tres revoluciones
Spanish publisher of manuals
Parodi: 1) "el “Instituto Gallach de Librerías y Ediciones”, fundado en Barcelona en 1899, se especializaba en la publicación de obras sobre arte, historia universal, geografía, enciclopedias, muchas veces en varios volúmenes, pero también desarrollaba una línea editorial de manuales sobre temas prácticos: Manual del pintor decorador, Manual de Motores industriales de combustión interna, Manual del electricista práctico, etc. Aunque no vinculado con los manuales, el apellido Gallach se menciona también en “Gremialista” §2 y en “Fiesta” §12. En Descanso 299, en el apartado sobre “los libros que más asiduamente manejaba en mis albores de escritor”, menciona Bioy “un Prontuario del idioma, de los Manuales Gallach”" (154).
2) "“Gallach y Gasset”: supuesto escribano, cuñado de Baralt. El nombre del personaje está creado por combinación de los apellidos Gallach, el editor de Manuales (cf. “Signo” §4) y el segundo apellido de José Ortega" (287).
French Orientalist, 1646-1715, translator of the Arabian Nights
priest mentioned in Suárez Lynch novella, a parody of Leonardo Castellani, Argentine priest and writer, 1899-1981
Parodi: "probable alusión al sacerdote Leonardo Castellani; cf. “Sangiácomo” i §18" (205).
French publishing house founded by Gaston Gallimard in 1911
Tomlinson, 1927
Chinese creature
Argentine intellectual, Trotskyist associated with the Boedo group
Spanish jurist and orator, 1833-88
Parodi: "“el orador de segunda fila José Gallostra y Frau”: (1833-1888), fue un abogado y político liberal español, autor de varias obras de jurisprudencia" (234).
British playwright and novelist, 1867-1933, author of the Forsyte Saga and other works
Argentine translator
English scientist, 1822-1911
Argentine actress
Argentine novelist, 1882-1962, author of El mal metafísico, Nacha Regules and many other works
Spanish poet, 1882-1940, evoked in several early Borges poems
city in the Connaught in western Ireland
Portuguese navigator, c.1469-1524
subtitle of Mir Bahadur Ali's The Conversation with the Man Called Al'Mu'tasim
Short story from The Old Man and Other Stories, 1927, work attributed in the Antología de la literatura fantástica to Holloway Horn.
Argentine intellectual associated with the Ministry of Culture
Argentine writer, 1903-1977, full name Carmen Rodríguez Larreta de Gándara, nicknamed la Nena
Vedic mythological figures
Indian politician and writer, 1869-1948
Argentine historian, 1906-95, author of Historia de la conquista del Río de la Plata y del Paraguay and the ten volumes of Historia de las ideas políticas en la Argentina
Parodi: 1) "“los infolios de Gandía, de Levene, de Grosso, de Radaelli.”: Enrique de Gandía (1906−1995), fue historiador y miembro de diversas academias. Autor de más de cincuenta títulos, en buena parte relacionados con la historia colonial, es uno de los cinco redactores de la Historia de la Nación dirigida por Ricardo Levene. En Borges, Bioy y Borges se ocupan de él varias veces: lo mencionan entre quienes al hablar se esfuerzan por remedar el acento español y, en 1969, comentan: “El que sigue vivo es Gandía; pero es un peligro para historiadores y políticos, no para nosotros.” (1262). Gandía vuelve a ser mencionado en la crónica de Bustos Domecq “Enfoque” §2. Ricardo Levene (1885−1959), fue un historiador y jurista argentino, miembro de la Academia de la Historia; autor de múltiples obras sobre la historia argentina y director de Historia de la Nación Argentina; desde los orígenes hasta la organización definitiva en 1862, publicada en 14 volúmenes entre 1936 y 1950. Borges y Bioy tampoco muestran aprecio por Levene, de quien dicen: “y ya se sabe lo que valen nuestros historiadores, llámeles finado Levene o diligente Gandía” (Borges 774). Las obras didácticas del historiador Alfredo Bartolomé Grosso (1867−1960), fueron los textos escolares en que varias promociones de estudiantes argentinos aprendieron la historia nacional, especialmente su Nociones de Historia Argentina (1893) y Curso de Historia Nacional (1898), conocidos como el Grosso Grande y el Grosso Chico, que siguieron empleándose en la enseñanza hasta fines de los años cincuenta. Sobre el historiador Sigfrido Augusto Radaelli cf. “Doce” i §1" (85).
2) "Enrique de Gandía (1906-1995) fue un historiador argentino, autor de más de un centenar de obras, algunas vinculadas con la región del Chaco (Historia del Gran Chaco (1929); Historia de la conquista del Rio de la Plata y del Paraguay 1535−1556 (1932); Los derechos del Paraguay sobre el Chaco Boreal en el siglo XVI (1935), etc. Gandía es mencionado también en “Sangiácomo” i §15. Para este uso del ‘etcétera’ en Bustos, cf. “Sangiácomo” i §20" (321).
river in India, sacred to the Hindus.
Fishburn and Hughes: "The sacred river of the Hindus, who believe that bathing in its waters washes away all sins. The Ganges rises in the Himalayas, runs through the northern plain of India (now Bangladesh) and flows into the gulf of Bengal." (75)
assumed name of Gylfi in the Gylfaginning, part of the Prose Edda
Asbury study, 1927
Anglo-Argentine writer, journalist and cattleman, 1901-77, author of Poets of the Rhymers Club and editor of the Argentine Anthology of Modern Verse
Alain epigrams
Ghent, city in Belgium
main character in Sinclair Lewis novel
street in Buenos Aires
Parodi: "“Lope de Vega y Gaona”: intersección de dos avenidas en el barrio de Villa Luro, al oeste de la ciudad" (205).
street in Ramos Mejía
street in Buenos Aires.
Fishburn and Hughes: "The name of a street intersecting with Plaza Constitución in the unfashionable southern part 76 of Buenos Aires." (75)
architect, character in Bustos Domecq story
Parodi: "supuesto joven escultor provinciano" (304).
thug in Buenos Aires
Spanish explorer, 1528-83
plaza in Buenos Aires
Parodi: "ubicada en el barrio de Constitución, rodeada por las calles Pavón, Solís, Presidente Luis Sáenz Peña y la Avenida Garay, a pocas cuadras de la Estación Constitución (cf. “Signo” §8)" (304).
German scholar, 1857-1927, author of works on the Bhagavadgita, the Mahabharata, and of Contributions of Buddhism to Christianity, 1911
Swedish film actress, 1905-90
Peruvian critic and writer, 1885-1959
Portuguese poet and editor, 1470-1536, compiler of Cancioneiro Geral
Spanish poet, 1592?-1651, author of Rimas, Ariadna and other works
Spanish poet and playwright, 1898-1936
Spanish rhetorician, pedagogue and writer, 1768-1849, author of El catecismo de la Doctrina cristiana explicado o explicaciones del Astete que convienen también al Ripalda, 1837, and others
Argentine poet, 1920-1974
Argentine writer, 1901-1972
Argentine composer of tango and pianist (1914-2006).
Spanish poet, 1501?-1536, important for popularizing the new Italian style in Spanish
French scholar of Asian languages, 1794-1878, translator of Farid ud-din Attar's Mantiq al-Tayr.
Fishburn and Hughes: "A French orientalist, a specialist in Arabic, Persian and Hindustani, who translated the Parliament of Birds in two volumes in 1857 and 1863." (76)
medieval kingdom founded in Russia by Norsemen
Argentine tango singer, composer and film actor, born in Uruguay or France, 1887-1935
Parodi: "“la controversia sobre Carlos Gardel, Morocho del Abasto para los unos, uruguayo para los menos, tolosano de origen, como Juan Moreira, que se disputan las progresistas localidades antagónicas de Morón y Navarro, para no decir nada de Leguisamo, oriental mucho me temo”: Bustos agrega a los ejemplos anteriores algunos locales: el del cantante de tangos Carlos Gardel de quien algunos sostienen que nació en Toulouse, Francia, en 1890 (de ahí el reclamado origen ‘tolosano’) y otros, en Tacuarembó, Uruguay, en 1887; se lo conocía como “El morocho del Abasto”, por su vinculación con la zona del Mercado de Abasto (cf. “Doce” i §29) y los bares y cantinas de las inmediaciones" (321).
Sackville-West, 1946
El jardinero, Kipling story, 1925
true name of Carlos Gardel according to some accounts
Robert Francis novel, 1937
US novelist, 1889-1970, writer of detective novels about Perry Mason
US mathematician and science writer, 1914-2010, editor of Lewis Carroll
pseud. of Zuñiga
Parodi: "pseudónimo bajo el cual el Molinero publicó su Aviso respetuoso al Señor Alcalde de Magallón. La garduña es un animal carnicero que destruye las crías de otros; a esta acepción añade DRAE que también tiene el significado coloquial de “ratero que hurta con maña y disimulo”" (439-40).
Spanish poet, 1901-1967
character in Bustos Domecq story
Parodi: "“el capo de nuestra carrada, Garfunkel”: toda la ‘carga’ del camión, responde a las órdenes de Garfunkel, ‘el capo’, el que impone orden. ‘Carrada’: en Argentina, equivale a lo que en castellano ibérico se llama ‘carretada’, la carga que lleva un carro" (361).
part of Iguazú Falls
Rabelais’s work, 1534.
Italian patriot, 1807-82, of whom there is a statue in Plaza Italia in Buenos AIres
“el Garibotto”. The Garibotto Café was one of the favorite hangouts of tango musicians. It was located at Pueyrredón and San Luis, in Buenos Aires. (Mentioned in Suárez Lynch novella.)
Parodi: "el Café Garibotto, un bar al que asistían figuras del tango, ubicado en el barrio de Balvanera, en la esquina de Pueyrredón y San Luis, propiedad de Carlos Garibotto" (214).
character in Borges story
character in Bustos Domecq story
Parodi: "abogado, personaje sólo en “Bonavena”" (259).
Scandinavian mythological dog
city in Kansas
English translator of Russian novels, 1861-1946
British writer, 1892-1981, part of Bloomsbury Group, author of Lady into Fox
English literary scholar, 1835-1906, author of books on Carlyle, Milton, Blake, Dryden and others
French publisher of Spanish works
Dante Garófalo was a famous pianist and tango orchestra conductor. (Mentioned in Bustos Domecq story.)
Parodi: "Garofalo, pianista y director de la orquesta “Los rítmicos”" (375).
street in London where David Garnett had a bookstore
US sheriff who befriended and later killed Billy the Kid, 1850-1908
Mexican writer (1920-1988), author of Los recuerdos del porvenir (1963) and Testimonios sobre Mariana (1981) among other works.
British literary critic, 1878-1960, author of studies of Keats, Collins, Housman and others
Hindu mythological bird
Hindu traditional book, the 17th Purana
Frisian prince
Argentine lexicographer, author of Diccionario argentino, 1910
Parodi: "La celebración del Centenario de la Revolución de Mayo en 1910 estimuló la publicación de léxicos y diccionarios del idioma nacional. En ese año, el educador y escritor argentino Tobías Garzón (1849-1914) publicó en Barcelona, bajo los auspicios de la Comisión Nacional del Centenario, un Diccionario argentino, que fue premiado en 1913 por la Sociedad Patriótica Española. Se trata de un volumen ilustrado, de más de quinientas páginas a doble columna, y constituye el léxico más completo de los publicados hasta el momento. Tobías Garzón es también autor de dos obras de carácter didáctico, Gramática castellana y Gramática argentina, además de fundador del diario La Opinión" (182).
Portuguese Dominican friar, c. 1520-1570, author of Tratado das cousas da China
Kipling story, 1888
Murena’s short story.
character in Fitzgerald novelThe Great Gatsby
equestrian sculpture by Donatello in Padua, 1453
Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa novel, 1958
Fishburn and Hughes: "The name for horsemen of Spanish, Negro and/or Indian blood who lived in the River Plate provinces and were known for their poverty, bravery and love of freedom. Traditionally nomadic, the gauchos worked in open cattle-ranching, but with the advent of wire fencing in the nineteenth century their free-roaming life came to an end. Today the term has connotations both of extreme bravery and laziness; the gaucho has become a literary, almost a mythical, figure. The etymology of the word is uncertain, and its interpretation can be taken as a barometer of the political climate. According to one theory, the word was originally guacho, from the Mapuche huacho, meaning orphaned, destitute. More recent research maintains that it originated in the border area between Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil, and means a deserter and cattle thief; it is still pronounced 'gaúcho' there, and may stem from the Guarani caúcho, meaning a drunkard. Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius." (76)
Essay by Jorge Luis Borges
first part of Hernández's Martín Fierro, 1872, sometimes called the "Ida"
Parodi: "“que se hiciese llamar por los familiares el Gaucho Martín Fierro”: el éxito del poema de Hernández fue tan sin precedentes, que el público identificaba al poeta con su personaje. Cuando Hernández fue elegido senador nacional, la prensa y los conciudadanos aludían a él no como ‘el senador Hernández’ sino como el ‘Senador Martín Fierro’, y el 22 de octubre de 1886, cuando se publicó la noticia de su muerte, un titular de la prensa anunciaba: “Ayer murió el Senador Martín Fierro”" (418-19).
Coni, 1945
book with preface by Borges, text by J. L. Lanuza and photographs by Burri, 1968
Elías Regules poem
subtitle of Ascasubi's Paulino Lucero
Gerchunoff short story collection, 1910
Fishburn and Hughes: "A novel by the Russian-born Jewish Argentine writer Alberto Gerchunoff (1833-1949), published in 1910 as part of the centenary celebrations of independence. The novel is a paean to work, fraternity and man's ability to rise above life's obstacles, as experienced in Argentina. Set in a Jewish colony in the province of Entre Ríos, it tells of the hardships suffered by the early colonists and their eventual triumph over natural and cultural difficulties. Its overidealised portrayal has led to the saying that it depicts neither Jews nor gauchos. CF 353: ‘There were never any Jewish gauchos. We were merchants and small farmers’." (101)
French literary scholar, co-author with René Etiemble of various works on Rimbaud
Argentine poet, 1900-1983
movie theater in Buenos Aires
Parodi: "se trata de una sala de cine fundada en 1912 con el nombre de ‘Cinematógrafo de la Plaza del Congreso’; el edificio actual, ubicado en el mismo predio, data de 1946. En 2003 el gobierno nacional cedió la sala al Espacio INCAA (Instituto Nacional de Cine y Artes Audiovisuales) destinado a la proyección y fomento del cine nacional por parte del Estado" (350).
character in Bioy Casares's El sueño de los héroes
maiden name of Aarón Loewenthal's wife.
Fishburn and Hughes: "Perhaps an allusion to the mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777-1855), whose theory of numbers influenced Kantor. See Mengenlehre." (76)
German mathematician and scientist, 1777-1855
family name of Siddhartha, called the Buddha after his enlightenment
the "dame aux camélias," character in Dumas novel
French poet and critic, 1811-1872
knight in Arthurian legend, hero of Middle English poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Lugones poem in Romancero
2nd century roman jurist. Author of Las Institutas.
city and surrounding area of Palestine
Rudolf Steiner, 1920
Kafka short story about a vulture
king in the Elder Edda
Aulus Gellius, Roman writer, c.130-180, author of Noctes Atticae
Gelo, ruler of Gela and Syracuse in the fifth century BCE
Georgius Gemistus Pletho, Greek Platonic philosopher and scholar, c.1355-1450
Milestone film, 1936
Haslam
avenue that marks the limits between the federal capital of Buenos Aires an
avenue that marks the limits between the federal capital of Buenos Aires and the province of Buenos Aires
Parodi: "“un éxito […] que rebasó la General Paz”: desde 1941, la Avenida General Paz conforma la casi totalidad del límite entre la ciudad y la provincia de Buenos Aires. El éxito de Recado para don Martiniano Leguizamón “rebasó la General Paz” es decir que desde la provincia de Entre Ríos pasó a la ciudad de Buenos Aires" (416).
d the province of Buenos Aires
Borges poem in Luna de enfrente
train line
Lindsay, 1913
Guyau, 1890
first book of Bible
Germanic poem
Gide story, 1936
Mongol emperor of China, 1162-1227, also called Jenghiz, Jingis or the Gran Khan.
Fishburn and Hughes: "The great Mongol warrior and ruler of genius who, after subduing the nomadic tribes of Mongolia, turned his attention to neighbouring states. Genghis led a series of expansionist military campaigns of extraordinary atrocity and plunder which resulted in the establishment of the Great Mongol Empire." (76)
Chateaubriand work of Christian apologetics, 1802
Parodi: "“que por la parte baja te representa cero treinta en Genioles”: desde 1927 hasta mediados de los años cincuenta, “Geniol” fue la marca dominante y más popular del mercado de las aspirinas; el nombre de fábrica se convirtió en un genérico para cualquier analgésico" (377).
genies in Arabian Nights
Dreiser novel, 1915
Tale of Genji, classic Japanese novel of the eleventh century by Murasaki Shikibu
Genoa, port city in Italy.
Fishburn and Hughes: "Genoa, a city and fortified port in north-west Italy which came under Roman rule in the third 77 century BC and prospered as a port. After the fall of the Roman Empire, it was invaded first by the Lombards and then by the Moors. By the twelfth century it was one of the most important maritime republics of the Mediterranean, promoter of the Crusades, coloniser of the Levant and a bitter rival of Venice." (76)
See White People
Italian philosopher, 1875-1944
woman in New York gang
El caballero en la sala, Maugham novel, 1930
German scholar, 1878-1959, translator of Elder Edda
English chronicler, c.1100-1154, author of Historia Regum Britanniae
George Kimble, 1938
Marie-Louis Pailleron book, 1938
Fishburn and Hughes: "A Christian martyr who was adopted as patron saint of England under Edward III in about 1348; crusaders returning from Antioch had made him popular. CF 246: The reference is to the medieval legend of the triumph of St George over the Dragon, symbol of the Devil. The Zahir." (77)
German poet, 1863-1933
state in United States
character in the film The Gold Rush
Frank Swinnerton, 1935
Virgil poems on agriculture
Parodi:" “Las geórgicas (traducción de Ochoa)”: el libro publicado por César Paladión en 1918 remite a las Geórgicas, una de las obras del poeta latino Virgilio (cf. “Toros” iii §5). En la segunda mitad del siglo XIX, la obra completa de Virgilio fue traducida al castellano por Eugenio de Ochoa (1815-1872) escritor romántico español, narrador costumbrista, poeta, crítico, bibliógrafo, editor y traductor. Paladión, que “ignoraba las lenguas muertas”, publica las Geórgicas en castellano reproduciendo la traducción de Ochoa. En Borges 290-291, Bioy recuerda: “Borges dice que la traducción española de la Eneida, de Eugenio de Ochoa, que publicó Ureña, es excelente: ‘Reproduce muy bien los versos latinos’”" (255)
character in Stevenson's New Arabian Nights
French poet and playwright, 1885-1983
Benedictine monk of St. Gall, later bishop
Giraldus Cambrensis, medieva Welsh historian, c.1146-1220, author of Topographia Hibernica, Expugnatio Hibernica and Itinerarium Cambrense
French Jesuit missionary in China, 1654-1707
Argentine writer, 1884-1950, author of Los gauchos judíos and other works
German Lutheran divine, 1582-1637, author of numerous polemica and exegetica works
19th century German translator of the Eddas
Geryon, monster with three bodies or three heads, slain by Hercules
town in the province of Buenos Aires
Title of a tango song.
Fishburn and Hughes: "Also called the Second Reich to indicate its descent from the First (the medieval Holy Roman Empire). The German Reich was initiated by Bismark in 1871. Kaiser Wilhelm II was Emperor during the latter period up to the end of World War I. Following the tradition, Hitler called his regime the Third Reich.The Garden of Forking Paths." (77)
Hugh Walpole story
Capelle, 1939
De origine et situ Germanorum, Tacitus monograph on the territory and the tribes east of the Rhine and north of the Danube
ancient name for Germany; see also Alemania
Fishburn and Hughes: "A varying symbol in the context of different stories. The Garden of Forking Paths): the defiant and hostile attitude of the Chinese spy Yu Tsun, who acted as a German agent, appears justified in the light of events of the previous halfcentury. The German empire, established in 1870, joined the nineteenth-century scramble for China during the Sino-Japanese War (1894-5), and seized the port of Kioo-chow as a reward for supporting China. A German fleet was sent to patrol Chinese waters. In 1900 Germany joined the other European powers in suppressing the Boxer Rebellion, a formidable nationalist uprising against foreign penetration led by the Dowager Empress and her Manchu advisers. Kaiser Wilhelm II exhorted the German troops embarking for the east to emulate the Huns of the fifth century in putting down the enemy. Though the German forces reached Peking after the rebellion had been defeated, the Kaiser demanded that the young Prince Chum, half-brother of the Emperor, be sent to Berlin on a penitential mission and even asked that he perform 'kow-tow' in front of him. Story of the Warrior and the Captive Maiden: in the context of Droctulft's story, the marshes of Germany are the sign of a country still in the stage of barbarism, contrasted with the civilisation embodied in Ravenna. In 'Deutsches Requiem' Germany is used in two sets of conflicting images. Uppermost lies the representation of the spirit of pure Germanism (Kerndeutsch) as expounded in the Third Reich ideology of the master race. Briefly, this argued that the Nordic Aryans were the bearers of the highest form of civilisation and culture and that their purity had to be preserved for the salvation of mankind. Yet this image is offset by the wider, humanistic tradition exemplified by Hegel, Brahms and Goethe and even by their appropriation of Shakespeare. The Garden of Forking Paths; Story of the Warrior and the Captive Maiden; Deutsches Requiem." (77)
character in the Nibelungenlied
US science fiction writer, 1884-1967
Eliot poem
Danish queen, Hamlet's mother
Tasso poem, published without his consent in 1580, later revised under the title Gerusalemme Conquistata, published in 1593
Vilmar history of German literature revised by Rohr in 1936
Winternitz, 1905
Frauwallner, 1953
Work by Gustav Weil, 1860-62
Niedner translation of Eyrbyggja Saga, 1920
German translation of Genji Monogatori
Un linaje, von Unruh play, 1917
Fishburn and Hughes: "A misprint for Gesenius. Deutsches Requiem." (78)
here a misprint for Heinrich Friedrich Wilhelm Gesenius, German orientalist and Biblical critic, 1786-1842, author of numerous works on the Hebrew and Maltese languages, on the Samaritans and Syrians, as wel as commentaries on the Pentateuch and Isaiah.
Fishburn and Hughes: "(1786-1842). A German orientalist and biblical scholar famous for his rationalist methods of exegesis. In 1830 he was subjected to violent attack in the Evangelical press under the editorship of Hengstenberg. Gesenius was a friend of Thilo, with whom in 1820 he travelled to Paris, London and Oxford to examine oriental manuscripts. Deutsches Requiem." (77)
German-Swiss writer and naturalist, 1516-1565, author of Enchiridion historiae plantarum, Bibliotheca universalis, Historia animalium and other works
Eckermann memoir, 1836-1848
Saxo Grammaticus 13th century history of the Danes, sometimes called Historia Danica
collection of Latin chronicles and historical documents on the Crusades, published in 1611
early Borges poem later called Gesta maximalista
Fishburn and Hughes: "An abbreviation for the German Geheime Staatspolizei (German secret police) responsible for 'security' within the Third Reich. Founded by Goering, and later controlled by Himmler, it had the power of arbitrary arrest of anyone considered to be an enemy of the state, and its decisions were not subject to judicial examination. It was declared a criminal organisation by the Nuremberg Tribunal of 1946. The Secret Miracle." (78)
Excerpt from Le grand Écart by Cocteau.
village near Jerusalem
town in Pennsylvania, site of important battle in U. S. Civil War
Persian theologian and mystic, sometimes called Algazel, 1058-1111, author of the Tahafut-ul-Tahafut or Incoherence of the Philosophers
Fishburn and Hughes: "A famous Persian theologian. After a nervous breakdown, Ghazali suffered a spiritual crisis and for a time became a Sufi mystic. He tried to reconcile the tensions between theology and philosophy. His anti-rationalist Tahafut-al-falasifa (Destruction of Philosophy) attacked the Neoplatonism of Avicenna (Ibn Sina), holding that the world was deliberately created by God and not simply an emanation of a First Being. His use of the word Tahafut (destruction) implies something like the collapse of a house of cards. The same concept was used by Averroes in his refutation of Ghazali." (78)
French poet, 1862-1925, author of Traité du verbe
Fishburn and Hughes: "The third letter of the Hebrew alphabet with a numerical value of three. See Aleph. The Lottery in Babylon." (78)
city in Egypt near Cairo, site of Pyramids
Uruguayan painter, 1887-1965
Ferber novel, 1950
English clergyman and writer, 1636-1680, author of a famous book on witches and witchcraft, 1666
English historian, 1737-94, author of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire and other works
Fishburn and Hughes: "An English historian, author of The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1776-88). The first three volumes cover the history of Rome from the Antonines in the second century to the fall of the Western empire in the fifth; the last three take it to the sack of Constantinople ('New Rome') by Mahomet II in 1453. Though Gibbon shocked some contemporaries by the scepticism displayed in his account of the rise of Christianity, his work was much admired by others, such as David Hume, and remains a classic of English historiography. See 'Terribilis visu facies...' " (78)
Parodi: "Edward Gibbon (1737-1794), historiador británico, autor del célebre Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire; cf. “Teatro” §3" (290).
Parodi: "en 1787, en una casa con jardín cercana a la Plaza Saint-François, de Lausana, el historiador inglés Edward Gibbon (1737-1794) completó los quince años de redacción de su monumental The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, (1776-1788). Desde 1839 a 1920, un hotel frente a esa plaza llevó el nombre de Gibbon" (290).
British possession in southern Spain
British poet, 1878-1962
French writer, 1869-1951, author of Les Faux-Monnayeurs, L'Immoraliste, a Journal and other works
O. Henry story
nickname for character in Bustos Domecq
place in the Sierras de Córdoba
singer
Parodi: "“se cree Gardel. Es más, se cree Gotusso. Es más se cree Garófalo. Es más, se cree Giganti-Tomassoni”: En cuanto a los dos apellidos mencionados en último lugar, insinúan que se trataría del nombre de una de las muchas orquestas que actuaban en los años cuarenta, la época de oro del tango, cuando los cantores se hicieron tan populares y famosos que las grandes orquestas se identificaban por el apellido del director seguido por el del cantor (como D’Arienzo-Fiorentino, Francini-Pontier, D’Agostino-Vargas, etc.)" (375).
character in Bustos Domecq story
Swiss classical philologist, 1912-1998, author of Ursprang der griechischen Philosophie
Lesage picaresque romance, 1715-1735
Parodi:" novela de Alain−René Lesage (1668−1747) publicada en 1715, una obra que, siguiendo el modelo de la picaresca española, ofrece una visión satírica de la sociedad francesa de su época" (60).
Pseudonym of Miguel Toledano de Escalante (1870-1937).
Argentine writer, author of Silvano Corujo, 1938
English literary scholar and translator, 1883-1969, author of various books on Joyce
British historian, called "The Wise," d. 570, author of De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae
British scholar of China, 1845-1935, author of Chuang Tzu, a Short History of Chinese Literature and other works
Sumerian epic
fabulous bird of North America
French philosopher and scholar, 1884-1978, author of studies of medieval philosophy, Descartes, Aquinas and other subjects
James Curtis novel, 1936
supposed Argentine film
Reyes anecdote in Reloj de sol
Geneva, city in Switzerland where Borges lived during the First World War and where he died in 1986.
Fishburn and Hughes: "A Swiss city. Throughout World War I Borges lived with his family in Geneva where he attended the College Calvin. He often visited the city, and he died there on 14 June 1986. Geneva was a focal point in the Reformation as the home of Calvinism, a branch of the Protestant Church associated with strict moral codes. " (76)
Guinevere, British queen of Arthurian legend
English Hebrew scholar, born in Warsaw, 1831-1914, author of a critica study of the Massorah, as wel as Facsimiles of Manuscripts of the Hebrew Bible and The Text of the Hebrew Bible in Abbreviations
alias of Scharlach in Borges story, the name being derived from that of Christian David Ginsburg.
Fishburn and Hughes: "Ginzberg - Ginsburg - Gryphius: Three aliases of the character Scharlach in 'Death and the Compass'. The first two are common Jewish surnames: Louis Ginzberg (1873-1953) was an American Talmudic and Rabbinic scholar who wrote extensively on Jewish subjects and edited the Jewish Encyclopaedia; David Ginsburg (1831-1914), who converted to Christianity in 1846, was the author of The Kabbalah: Its Doctrines, Development and Literature, first published in 1863. The narrator of The Unworthy Friend' is said to own books on the Cabbala by Ginsberg. Andreas Gryphius (1616-1664) was a leading German lyric poet and dramatist with a predilection for 'sanguinary themes and the terrors of the supernatural'. His delight in the absurd is exemplified by the title of one of his comedies, Horribilicribifax. " (79)
character in Bustos Domecq story
Parodi: "sobre este personaje, comenta Bioy en 1967: “Los otros días apareció en Primera Plana una nota sobre Crónicas de Bustos Domecq. Además de la idea general –que estamos viejos, vale decir chochos−, afirma que uno de los personajes absurdos allí descritos puede ser Oliverio Girondo. Esto es falso: en ningún momento pensamos en Oliverio cuando inventamos nuestros cuentos. No somos personas tan desprovistas de caridad como para satirizar a un enfermo que se debate con la muerte.” (Borges 1167). En una nota al pie, Daniel Martino reproduce unas líneas del artículo en cuestión, “Los fuegos fatuos”, aparecido en 1967, en el número 213 de la revista Primera Plana: “Ahora, bajo la máscara de la interpretación artística, del comentario de costumbres, vibra el disparate. El disparate forzado, para especialistas. Quizá haya que rastrear esta caída en la edad de Bustos Domecq”. La reseña en cuestión supone que el personaje de Santiago Ginzberg “acaso sea Oliverio Girondo.” En la obra personal de Borges, en su relato “La muerte y la brújula” (Artificios, 1944), uno de los alias del detective Red Scharlach es “Ginzberg (o Ginsburg)” (501). El segundo alias deriva del apellido del erudito anglo-polaco Christian David Ginsburg (1831-1914), autor de varios volúmenes dedicados a estudio y traducción de tratados bíblicos. Su obra más célebre es un estudio crítico de la Biblia rabínica, la Masora, en tres volúmenes, publicados entre 1880 y 1886, que continuó en 1894 con Massoretico-critical edition of the Hebrew Bible. En cuanto al primer alias, Ginzberg, Martino lo vincula con Louis Ginzberg (1873-1953), erudito norteamericano autor de Eine unbekannte jüdische Sekte (1922), “donde estudia, según el llamado Documento de Damasco, la existencia de una secta radical desconocida del s. II a.C.” (“Notas” 62)" (298-99).
Italian philosopher and politician, 1801-52, author of De primato morale e civile degli italiani and other works
Huxley story, 1921
French author, 1895-1970, author of Naissance de l'Odysée
Parodi:" referencia a Jean Giono (1895−1970) escritor francés, autor de más de treinta novelas, muchas de las cuales tienen por escenario el paisaje campesino de su pueblo natal en la Provenza francesa, y de algunos dramas. Bioy (Borges 1317−1318) apunta: “Ha muerto Jean Giono. He leído muy poco a Giono y de eso hará treinta años. Su estilo, su amor por la naturaleza me parecían afectados; me confirmaron en la animadversión un artículo en La Nación, elogioso y confuso, de la pobre Carmen Gándara, su tendencia a favor de Vichy (durante la guerra) y la circunstancia de que Borges, no sé si con fundamentos más serios que los míos, lo menospreciaba. Exacerbó el menosprecio de ambos la admiración que le profesaba Guillermo de Torre; nunca se le caía de la boca el nombre, que pronunciaba Sancionó. Para peor, el mismo Giono era autor de un libro titulado Accompagnés de la flûte, lo que dio motivo a que pasara directamente al corpus de H. Bustos Domecq, en carácter de grosera broma de la familia de “Bartolo tenía una flauta con un agujerito solo”.” [Aparentemente Bioy y Borges acordaron no incluir esta broma, ya que no aparece en ninguno de los cuentos escritos en colaboración]" (75-76).
Carriego's mother's maiden name
Italian painter, c.1226-1337.
Fishburn and Hughes: "An Italian painter who abandoned the stylised forms of Byzantine art, aiming at a more realistic representation of the human figure, and was thus an important forerunner of the Renaissance. CF 383: Giotto's Circle is also a pun, alluding to an incident recounted in Vasari's Lives of the Painters (1550). When Pope Benedict IX was seeking proof of Giotto's artistic capability before employing him to decorate Saint Peter's, Giotto 'with the turn of the hand produced a circle so perfect... that it was a marvel to see'. " (79)
street in Buenos Aires
Parodi: "“por San Pedrito o por Giribone”: dos calles de Buenos Aires; la primera corre por el barrio de Flores; la segunda, por Villa Ortúzar (cf. “Doce” i §14)" (177).
Ferber, 1924
Argentine man of letters, 1848-1931
Argentine poet, 1891-1963, author of Veinte poemas para ser leídos en el tranvía, Calcomanías and other works
Argentine poet and translator, 1919-91
character in the Nibelungenlied
Cervantes exemplary novel
character in a Cervantes exemplary novel
Tagore prose poems, 1913
Argentine essayist and critic, 1887-1978, co-founder and editor of the periodical Nosotros
Parodi: "“que Bianchi o que Giusti habrían rechazado la colaboración”: Alfredo A. Bianchi (1882-1942) y Roberto F. Giusti (1887-1978) dirigieron la revista Nosotros casi sin interrupciones entre 1907 y 1943. [...] Roberto F. Giusti, ensayista y crítico literario, nacido en Italia; fue profesor universitario y, como miembro del Partido Socialista, ocupó cargos políticos. Junto con Bianchi fundó Nosotros; fue presidente de la Sociedad Argentina de Escritores (1934-1937) y miembro de la Academia Argentina de Letras. Publicó obras de gramática castellana, de literatura argentina e hispanoamericana, antologías y gran cantidad de ensayos y artículos sobre temas literarios. Ni Bioy ni Borges tuvieron opiniones favorables sobre Giusti: Bioy, Descanso 479: “Me ignoró siempre en sus artículos críticos; en su Historia de la literatura argentina se limita a citarme como autor de género fantástico; y desde luego no votó por mí cuando fue miembro del jurado, para el premio nacional.”; en Borges 378, comenta “Borges: “Giusti sí, escribió mucho. Conoce la literatura italiana, pero no desprecia la española. Tan acostumbrado está a leer por obligación que, si algo le gusta, desconfía, sospecha que no ha de ser bueno.” Bioy: “Confunde lo ingrato con lo serio”. Agrega Borges en el año 1960: “Qué lamentable: en la Academia, el lacrimoso Marasso y el cocoliche Giusti han enviado una comunicación a las profesoras recomendándoles la sustitución del vos por el tú. El ambiente está hecho y yo no puedo hacer nada.” (690). “[…] En otro discurso, alguien dijo: “Esos maestros inolvidables: Giusti y Bianchi”. Borges: “¿Cómo serán las personas para quienes Giusti y Bianchi fueron maestros?”” (853). Sobre el calificativo “cocoliche” que Borges aplica a Giusti, cf. “Signo” §4" (276-77).
Snorri Sturluson's estranged son-in-law who assassinated him
German prince in the Volsunga Saga
British political figure, 1809-1898, prime minister on several occasions
character in the Egils Saga
British divine and writer, 1636-1680, author of The Vanity of Dogmatizing, Lux Orientalis and Saducismus Triumphans
City in Scotland
Hesse novel, 1943
Hammett detective novel, 1931
Williams play, 1945
John Cowper Powys, 1932
Jewish scholar, author of In Time and Eternity and other works
Glaucus of Anthedon in Boeotia, a Greek mythological figure who wooed Scylla in vain
Glaucus of Corinth, son of Sisyphus and father of Bellerophon
Russian-born Argentine publisher, 1889-1966.
Fishburn and Hughes: "Librarian, publisher and editor. His bookshop was a meeting point for young writers, Borges among them." (79)
French painter and art critic, 1881-1953
general, ancestor of Clara Glencairn de Figueroa in Borges story
character in Borges story
Scottish military man in India, character in Borges story, perhaps descended from the earls of Glencairn
character in Borges story, president of the "Congreso"
author of Teach Yourself Icelandic
town in the province of Buenos Aires
Dunsany, 1914
theatre in London of which Shakespeare was a part owner
Planes
Lorikus's wife in the Prose Edda
Larreta historical novel, 1908
name for Elizabeth I in The Faerie Queene, see also Isabel de Inglaterra.
Fishburn and Hughes: "Spenser's name for Queen Elizabeth in The Faerie Queene." (79)
mythical character in Dunsany
Du Cange, 1678
Excerpt from Mystiques et les Magciens du Tibet (1929), by Alexandra David-Neel.
Becher, 1938
winged race in Paltock's Peter Wilkins
Possible joke related to Samuel Glusberg’s last name. (Mentioned in Bustos Domecq story.)
place where the dragon Fafnir lives in the Fafnismal.
Fishburn and Hughes: "The place to which Fafnir is said to have removed the stolen treasure in the Norse Fáfnismál." (79)
race of diminutive spirits that live in the earth, described by Paracelsus
Zorrilla, 1886.
gnosticism.
Fishburn and Hughes: "From the Greek gnôsis, knowledge: the collective term designating a number of early Christian sectarian doctrines. Because of its emphasis on direct knowledge of God and the secret of salvation, and its adherents' claim to possess this knowledge, Gnosticism was declared heretical by the Church Fathers. For the Gnostics, knowledge meant not rational 80 cognition but a revelationary experience 'transforming the knower himself by making him a partaker in the divine existence' (H. Jonas, The Gnostic Religion, Boston 1958). The essential feature of Gnosticism was its dualism. God is 'absolutely transmundane', alien to the universe, which he has not created and does not govern and to which he is as opposed as light is to darkness. The world is the creation of 'lower powers', Archons (rulers), who, though descended from God, do not 'know' God and obstruct knowledge of him. The earth is the domain of the Archons, whose leader is the Demiurge, or World Artificer. It is likened to a prison surrounded by cosmic spheres. Each Archon rules the earth and his particular sphere and bars the passage of souls wishing to escape and return to God. Mirroring the composition of the cosmos is the composition of man, whose origin is similarly twofold, his earthly body being bound by (seven) cosmic spheres, whereas 'pneuma', a spark of dormant divinity, is enclosed in his soul. The aim of Gnostic thinking is to liberate this imprisoned spark through 'knowledge'. Of particular relevance to Borges's work is the Gnostics' use of the labyrinth as a metaphor of a universe encompassing a plurality of worlds. Each section of the labyrinth corresponds to a different world through which the soul loses its way and wanders about, but whenever it seeks an escape 'it only passes from one world into another that is no less world'. Little was heard of the Gnostics after the second century, but their beliefs survived among other heretics, notably the Albigensians in the twelfth century. Because their beliefs implied that Jesus was not the Redeemer of humanity, the Gnostics were looked upon as Antichrist." (79)
spiritual
city in India on the Malabar coast, formerly a Portuguese colony
Burton, 1851
travel book by Frederico Diniz D' Ayalla
Campo poem in Poesias, 1870
Lafcadio Hearn story about Japan
Jack London
Chesterton story in The Wisdom of Father Brown
Quain mystery novel, 1933
Wells, 1917
Caldwell novel, 1933
Cummings poem
Argentine poet, 1900-?, author of Nacimiento de fuego, childhood friend of Borges
Godfrey of Bouillon, medieval Frankish knight, c. 1060-1100, character in Tasso's Gerusalemme poems
street in Buenos Aires
Argentine poet, 1793-1866
Saxon warrior in the Battle of Maldon
Dunsany, 1905
Nazi propagandist, 1897-1945
Latinized version of the surname of Goethe
Nazi leader, 1893-1946
Polish novelist and travel writer, 1890-1960, author of Voyage aux Indes
essay in a volume on the Berlin Olympics of 1936
German poet and writer, 1749-1832, author of Faust, Egmont, Iphigenie auf Tauris, Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre and other works.
Fishburn and Hughes: "The most celebrated modern German writer, exceptional for the range and depth of his work and generally considered the last universal genius. In his great drama Faust Goethe presents a symbol of Western European man in his unceasing quest for all possible experience. Although man's activity is shown to have negative results, the spark that ignites him is regarded as divinely inspired and in harmony with Nature. The Garden of Forking Paths: by comparing the sinologist Albert with Goethe, the narrator attributes to Albert a transcendental understanding of the individual human condition. This idea is emphasised in Deutsches Requiem), where Goethe is referred to as 'the prototype of that ecumenic comprehension'. The allusion to hammer and anvil as metaphors for master and slave is derived from two of Goethe's poems, 'Koptisches Lied' and 'Epigramme 14'. " (80)
Parodi: 1) "“Desde la perspectiva que le brinda su Weimar litoral, nuestro Goethe de ropavejería”: el poeta, novelista y dramaturgo Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832), la figura más célebre de las letras alemanas, vivió en la ciudad de Weimar, a orillas del río Ilm, desde 1775 hasta su muerte. Bustos Domecq es aquí comparado con Goethe porque vivió en Rosario, a orillas del Paraná, desde su adolescencia y publicó allí sus primeras obras (cf. “H.B.D.” §3). La comparación que establece Montenegro provoca una nota al pie de Bustos Domecq, en la que menciona al “doctor Baralt”. Este supuesto abogado, con bufete en la calle Pasteur (cf. “Gremialista” §1) es el creador de una doctrina sobre el gremialismo, autor de los seis volúmenes Gremialismo (1947-54) (cf. §2) y compilador de una lista de todos los gremios posibles (cf. §6); asimismo, descubridor del calzado invertido (cf§1) y cuñado del escribano Gallach y Gasset (cf. §2). El doctor Baralt aparece identificado también como ‘González Baralt’ en “Enemigo” §25 y en “Penumbra” §1, donde también se lo menciona por el apellido ‘Baralt’, que vuelve a aparecer en “Deslindando” §28. Por otra parte, este apellido ocupa un lugar destacado en las letras hispánicas: el venezolano Rafael María Baralt (1810-1860) fue el primer hispanoamericano elegido académico de número en la Real Academia Española. En 1850 publicó un Diccionario de Galicismos que Bioy confiesa haber consultado asiduamente en sus comienzos de escritor" (249).
2) "en Representative Men, Emerson dedicó el capítulo VII a Goethe, bajo el título de “Goethe; or, The Writer”. Para Goethe, cf. Crónicas “Prólogo” §4; “Paladión” §1" (294).
Emerson essay in Representative Men
prince of Meshech and Tuba in the Bible who, with Magog, represents the nations of the earth deceived by Satan.
Papini
Fishburn and Hughes: "Various legends in biblical and Muslim apocalyptic literature connect Gog and Magog with two powers under the dominion of Satan (e.g. Revelation 20). CF 238: The incident referred to can be found in the Koran (Sura 18.92-8), where it is related that, when Dhul Qarnain (whom commentators have identified with Alexander the Great) was journeying from the south to the north, he came upon people who asked for his protection, begging him to build them a rampart against Gog and Magog who were ravaging their land. They offered him tribute, which he refused, saying, 'The power which my Lord has given me is better than any tribute.' With their help he built a strong wall to protect them. According to a Syriac legend, Gog and Magog attempt every night to escape from their confinement by digging under the wall, but before morning God repairs the breach. Averroës’ Search." (80)
Buber novel, 1949
Oliver St. John Gogarty, Irish poet, physician and athlete, 1878-1957, model for Joyce's Buck Mulligan
Russian novelist
town near Hyderabad in southern India
Poe story
Chaplin film, 1925
US journalist and writer, 1887-1938
Bradbury novel, 1953
Frazer comparative study of religion, 1890-1915
Countee Cullen poem, 1923
newspaper and literary journal in San Francisco, 1852-1893
Palgrave anthology, 1861
Lindsay collection of poems, 1920
British writer, 1895-1958
Italian writer of stage comedies, 1707-1793.
Fishburn and Hughes: "An Italian playwright born in Venice, where he spent most of his life. Goldoni revolutionised Italian theatre, which until then had depended largely upon the conventions of the commedia dell'arte (improvised performances of stock comic situations by masked characters). He brought realism to the stage with his satirical social comedies whose distinguishing feature was their fast and witty dialogue, showing the influence of Molière. Those written in the Venetian dialect are considered his best. Goldoni was a prolific writer, the author of some 250 plays of which 150 are comedies. In 1765 he was engaged to teach Italian to the daughters of Louis XV, but his pension was withdrawn during the French Revolution and he died in poverty. His memoirs are considered an important document of eighteenth-century life." (81)
probably Ludwig Goldscheider, Austrian-British art historian, 1896-1973, compiler of Die schönsten Gedichte der Weltliteratur. Ein Hausbuch der Weltlyrik, von den Anfängen bis heute, published in Vienna in 1934
Anglo-Irish writer, 1730-1774, author of the Vicar of Wakefield and other works
Parodi: "Oliver Goldsmith (c.1730-1774), poeta, novelista, dramaturgo, crítico literario, periodista, naturalista y médico irlandés fue autor de la célebre novela The Vicar of Wakefield (El vicario de Wakefield, 1766), del poema pastoral The Deserted Village (1770), de obras teatrales The Good-natur’d Man (1768) y She Stoops to Conquer (1771). El fragmento citado en el epígrafe proviene de la dedicatoria del poema The Traveller; or, a prospect of society, (El viajero, 1764) que fue publicado a instancias de Samuel Johnson y dedicado al Reverendo Henry Goldsmith, hermano del poeta. Una cita más amplia del pasaje citado permite descubrir las intenciones de Goldsmith y entrever las de Bustos Domecq: “[…] Yet, however this art [of Poetry] may be neglected by the powerful, it is still in greater danger from the mistaken efforts of the learned to improve it. What criticisms have we not heard of late in favour of blank verse, and Pindaric odes, choruses, anapests and iambics, alliterative care, and happy negligence? Every absurdity has now a champion to defend it, and as he is generally much in the wrong, so he has always much to say. / But there is an enemy to this art still more dangerous, I mean party. Party entirely distorts the judgment, and destroys the taste.” Tal vez el rasgo más distintivo del poema sea la sátira del nacionalismo, un rasgo ideológico también presente en los textos de Crónicas. Como queda señalado, cada una de las crónicas tiene por tema alguna excentricidad, alguna “absurdity”, que encuentra sus defensores en artistas y críticos extravagantes" (246).
Polish-born US film producer, 1879-1974
being of Jewish legend created from a magic combination of letters
Meyrink novel, 1914
Borges poem, 1958
Excerpt from the Sanhedrin 65b.
Fishburn and Hughes: "The 'Placid Gulf’ on which lay Sulaco in Conrad's novel Nostromo. See Avellanos, Estado Occidental, Higuerota, José Korzeniovski. Guayaquil." (81)
character in the mythologies of William Blake, here spelled Golgonuza
nickname, see Marpurgo
mountain near Jerusalem, also called Calvary.
Fishburn and Hughes: "Otherwise known as Calvary: the hill on which Jesus was crucified." (81)
character in Bustos Domecq story
Parodi:" el apellido de este personaje coincide con el de Yakov Petrovich Goliadkin, el protagonista de la novela El doble, de Fiódor Dostoyevski (1821−1881), publicada en 1846" (55).
G. A. Borgese book against Mussolini, 1937
British publisher and humanitarian, 1893-1967, author of numerous works on religion, education and politics
Fishburn and Hughes: "Writer and influential publisher, founder of the Left Book Club, and champion of socialist and humanitarian causes. Dorothy Sayers was among the famous authors whose work he published." (81)
mythical character in Dunsany
character in unfinished novel of Nierenstein Souza
Parodi: "“El idilio rural de Golosa y Polichinela”: obra supuestamente editada por la Editorial Probeta. El título permite conjeturar que se trataría de un tema típico de la Commedia dell’Arte y de sus personajes estereotipados, como la dama glotona y el deformado y caricaturesco Polichinela" (266).
character in Suárez Lynch
Parodi: "“Golpe de Furca, que es el carnero de la disciplina”: personaje de Modelo, tal vez miembro de la A.A.A. El mote proviene de una técnica de robo, llamada en siciliano la furca (‘la horca’), llevada a cabo por más de un asaltante: mientras uno distrae a la víctima, el otro −o los otros− la atacan por la espalda, pasándole un brazo por el cuello para inmovilizarla. ‘Carnero’ se aplica a la persona que no adhiere a una huelga o una protesta de sus compañeros; el rompehuelgas" (205).
minor character in Borges-Bioy filmscript
family, characters in Nierenstein Souza's historical novel El feudo de los Gomensoro
character in Bustos Domecq story, author of En camino!, En Belen, Yo alecciono, La alfombra de esmeralda, Pan de centeno and other poems collected in his Antología
Parodi: "protagonista del cuento, supuesto poeta y compilador de la Primera antología abierta de la literatura nacional. Autor de la oda “¡En camino!”, del soneto “En Belén”, de las décimas “Yo alecciono”, de la silva “La alfombra de esmeralda”, del ovillejo “Pan de centeno”, entre otros poemas. Ha cursado únicamente la escuela primaria y en ratos robados al trabajo escribe versos que publica en diarios de la localidad de Maschwitz. Fue nombrado director del suplemento literario del diario La Opinión (cf. infra §11)" (422).
Portuguese poet and playwright, 1827-1891
old Buenos Aires family
Guatemalan writer, 1873-1927
Spanish journalist who used the pseudonym Adrenio, 1866-1929
Spanish poet and translator, 1568?-1643, who translated Pliny in 1599
Spanish writer, 1888-1963, author of greguerías, an autobiography, Automoribundia, numerous biographies, novels and plays
Spanish physician and philosopher, 1500-58, author of Antoniana Margarita
Uruguayan politician, journalist and romantic poet, 1820-1884, author of El cedro y la palma
Venezuelan dictator, 1857-1935
German philosopher and classical scholar, 1832-1912, author of numerous studies of Herodotus, Plato, Epicurus, Heraclitus and others
here a reference to both brothers, Edmond, 1822-1896, and Jules Alfred, 1830-1870, French novelists
Parodi: "Los hermanos Edmond (1822-1896) y Jules Alfred de Goncourt (1830-1870), escribieron parte de sus novelas en colaboración (Sœur Philomène, 1861; Renée Mauperin, 1864; Germinie Lacerteux, 1865; Manette Salomon, 1867; Madame Gervaisais, 1869)" (275).
French novelist and man of letters, 1822-96
French novelist and man of letters, 1830-70
evil daughter in King Lear
Miomandre essay, 1918
Spanish baroque poet, 1561-1627, author of the Soledades, Fábula de Polifemo y Galatea and other works
hero of an Icelandic saga
one of the Fornaldar Sogur
Thuggish singer of tango in Buenos Aires
Spanish novelist and critic, 1886-1924, author of Los contemporáneos
Parodi: "Andrés González Blanco (1886−1924), novelista, poeta y crítico literario español. Promocionó a jóvenes escritores españoles e hispanoamericanos en las tres series de Los contemporáneos (1907 a 1911)" (98).
Argentine writer, 1899-1958
Spanish humanist writer, 1558-1654, friend of Quevedo
Argentine poet and critic, born in Spain, 1900-84, author of Prismas, Aquelarre and other works
Spanish literary critic and scholar of Islam, 1889-1949
author of a book on San Martín published in 1972 with a Borges preface
Argentine writer, 1901-1943, brother of Raúl González Tuñón
Argentine poet, 1905-74, author of El violin de diablo, La calle de agujero en la media, La rosa blindada and other works
Argentine writer, 1863-1923, author of Mis montañas, 1895
knife-fighter in Buenos Aires
actress
knife-fighter in Buenos Aires
Sandburg book of poems, 1928
Phillpotts, novel, 1901.
Graves autobiography, 1929
strange fish of North America
bird of North America that flies backwards
Italian adventurer and writer, 1740-1819
one of the earliest of English tragedies, by Norton and Sackville, first performed in 1561
town in the province of Buenos Aires
Parodi: "pequeña localidad rural del Partido de General Belgrano, en la Provincia de Buenos Aires, situada a unos 150 km al sudoeste de la Capital" (117).
character in Mae West's The Constant Sinner
British general, 1833-1885, who died in Khartoum
Irish-born Canadian minister, 1860-1937, who wrote under the pseudonym of Ralph Connor, author of Black Rock, The Sky Pilot and The Man from Glengarry
British medieval scholar, 1896-1938, author of an Introduction to Old Norse and editor of various Old and Middle English poems
British scholar, 1923-92, editor of Anglo-Saxon Poetry
translator of Tacitus, d. 1750
Greek sophist philosopher, c. 483-376
Medusa and her sisters Sthenno and Euryale in Greek mythology
ghost in Lord Halifax's Ghost Book
pseud. of Alexander Peshkov, Russian writer, 1868-1936
street in Buenos Aires
Parodi: "“en un conventillo de la calle Gorriti”: en argentina, un conventillo equivale a una casa de inquilinato; cf. “Limardo” i §3. Gorriti es una calle del barrio de Palermo" (278).
Argentine writer (1819-1896)
English writer and biographer, 1849-1928, author of Father and Son, Northern Studies and other works
British writer, 1879-1959, author of The History of Piracy, The Pirates' Who's Who and other works
English scientist, father of Edmund Gosse, 1810-88
Stevenson essay on narrative fiction, 1880
Ladner,1948
German military slogan
Violines de Dios, Kurt Heynicke collection of poems, 1922
Gottfried von Strassburg, German poet, d. c. 1210, author of Tristan
German critic, 1700-1766, author of Versuch einer kritischen Dichtkunst für die Deutschen, 1730
singer
Parodi: "El apellido Gotusso no parece estar vinculado con ningún cantor de tango" (375).
Nietzsche essay, 1888
Jesuit, alias of Bogle in Borges's account of the story of the Tichborne Claimant
French composer for the opera, 1818-93, composer of Faust
French critic and novelist, 1858-1915, author of Le Livre des masques, Promenades littéraires and other works
singer
hotel in Bustos Domecq story
medieval English poet, c. 1330-1408
Spanish painter, 1746-1828
Argentine literary critic, 1843-1892, author of Crítica literaria
Fishburn and Hughes: "The plural of the Hebrew goy, meaning nation: a Yiddish name for Gentiles, or non-Jews. Death and the Compass." (81)
Italian literary scholar, 1897-1968, editor of Dante's Divina commedia
Bunyan homiletic narrative, 1666
Spanish writer, 1601-58, author of El criticón, Oráculo manual y arte de prudencia, Agudeza o arte de ingenio and other works
Parodi: "el escritor español del Siglo de Oro, Baltasar Gracián y Morales (1601-1658), es autor entre otras obras de Oráculo manual y arte de prudencia (1647), de donde proviene el aforismo que cita Bustos: “105. No cansar. Suele ser pesado el hombre de un negocio, y el de un verbo. La brevedad es lisonjera, y más negociante; gana por lo cortés lo que pierde por lo corto. Lo bueno, si breve, dos veces bueno; y aun lo malo, si poco, no tan malo. […] Lo bien dicho se dice presto”" (273).
Schopenhauer book
manual on Latin versification, many editions of which exist.
Fishburn and Hughes: " 'A step to Parnassus': a dictionary given to schoolboys to help them write Latin verses. Mount Parnassus was the home of the Muses." (81)
German anthropologist, author of Anthropologie, Methode der ethnologie and other works
minor character in Bustos Domecq story
Parodi: "“el camionero (que resultó ser Graffiacane)”: el apellido del camionero es también el de otro de los demonios que Dante menciona en el Infierno (cf. supra §12); Graffiacane, lo mismo que el apellido Cagnazzo, alude a un perro que, en este caso, rasguña" (377).
sports periodical in Buenos Aires
Parodi: "una revista semanal profusamente ilustrada y dedicada por entero al deporte; fundada en 1919 por Constancio C. Vigil, para Editorial Atlántida, dejó de aparecer en 2018. En la época en que se edita Seis problemas, se vendían unos 200.000 ejemplares por semana" (96).
Philadelphia magazine founded by George Rex Graham in 1841
character in Quevedo's Buscón
Fishburn and Hughes: "In the Volsungsaga, a magic sword wrought for Sigurd by his tutor Regin, rival brother of Fafnir. The sword was reputed to be so powerful that it could cleave a tree in two with a single blow, and so sharp that it could cut a thread of wool in water. The Zahir." (81)
Parodi:" "una tortilla Gramajo”: la mencionada ‘tortilla’ es en realidad un revuelto ya que los ingredientes básicos (papas, jamón) se mezclan con huevos, pero sin darles ninguna forma. El nombre de ‘revuelto Gramajo’, un plato que figura en el menú de algunos restaurantes argentinos, se atribuye al general Julio A. Roca (1843-1914), que fue Presidente de la República durante dos períodos (1880-1886 y 1898-1904) y también la figura responsable del exterminio de los indígenas de la Patagonia en la llamada ‘Conquista del desierto’ (1878-1885). Este plato, muy apreciado por Roca, fue bautizado con el nombre de su creador, Artemio Gramajo (1838-1904), su ayudante de campo durante la mencionada Conquista" (403-04).
official grammar of the Castilian tongue, first published in 1771
Karl Pearson, 1892
nickname for Buenos Aires, used as the title for Lucio V. López's 1884 novel La gran aldea, costumbres bonaerenses
Great Britain
late thirteenth-century Spanish novel about the conquest of Jerusalem
Latasa tango, 1906
pizzeria in Bustos Domecq story
Parodi:" el nombre de la supuesta pizzería alude a los partidarios entusiastas de algún club deportivo, generalmente de fútbol, a quienes popularmente se da el nombre de ‘hinchas’" (39).
ballad formerly attributed to Zúñiga
In the specific argot used by the narrator of this story, it means to sleep for a long time. (Mentioned in Bustos Domecq story.)
alternative title for Quevedo's novel El Buscón
city in southern Spain
Uruguayan lexicographer, 1849-1929, author of Vocabulario rioplatense razonado, 1889
Parodi: "Daniel Granada (1847-1929), abogado, docente y filólogo español, entre 1850 y 1904 vivió en Uruguay en diversas ciudades donde se desempeñó como juez. Es autor de varias obras sobre la lengua del Río de la Plata: en 1889 publicó un Vocabulario Rioplatense razonado, una obra enciclopédica en la que condensa sus estudios de filología, etnografía, geografía e historia regional. El Vocabulario de Granada fue el primer diccionario monolingüe, semasiológico y alfabético para la región del Río de la Plata. Además de incluir nombres propios y acontecimientos históricos, incorpora información sobre lenguas indígenas (quichua, guaraní y mapuche) y su influencia en el castellano rioplatense. Granada es también autor de Reseña histórico descriptiva de antiguas y modernas supersticiones del Río de la Plata (1896), en la que reúne una gran cantidad de datos sobre el folklore y las costumbres regionales. En más de quinientas páginas a doble columna incorpora ejemplos documentados de diversos géneros: literario, periodístico, académico, coplas del cancionero popular y discursos oficiales. La celebración del Centenario de la Revolución de Mayo en 1910 estimuló la publicación de léxicos y diccionarios del idioma nacional" (181-82).
An armored cavalry regime that fought in the Latin American Wars of Independence.
canyon of the Colorado River in Arizona
restaurant where Langston Hughes worked
Cocteau, novel, 1923.
Jacques Feyder film, 1934
here, a reference to the 1870 edition of the Larousse encyclopedia
French encyclopedia published between 1960 and 1964
Fishburn and Hughes: "The tramway company in Buenos Aires, set up in about 1870, controlled and managed by a British firm; the streetcars, which were originally drawn by horses, were later electrified. Until the middle of the nineteenth century, tramways were the main system of transportation in Buenos Aires. The Elderly Lady." (81-82)
Lugones political work, 1930
subject of Bustos Domecq's Vida y muerte de don Chicho Grande
Parodi: " el “panzón’ rosarino”: alusión a Chicho Grande, ‘capo’ de la mafia rosarina" (24).
river in Jujuy
Emecé´s series of important essays.
Góngora sonnet
Emecé´s collection of novel by well known authors.
special issue of NRF, 1937
family, characters in Bustos Domecq story
baron, character in Bustos Domecq story
character in Bustos Domecq story
character in Bustos Domecq story
character in Bustos Domecq story
French sociologist and Sinologist, 1884-1940, author of La Pensée chinoise, 1934
name in runic inscription
author of New Argument for God and Survival, 1934
U. S. general and president, 1822-85
English poet
Steinbeck novel, 1939
Tanagra, ancient city in Boetia
Capote novel, 1951
French publisher, 1881-1955
Argentine writer, b. 1925, known for his science fiction
English poet, novelist and critic, 1895-1985, author of The White Goddess, I Claudius and other works
character in Oscar Wilde novel
English poet, 1716-71
Conan Doyle, 1900.
El gran juego, film, may be the 1930 or the 1953 version, both called by this title
Fitzgerald novel, 1926
O'Neill play, 1925
Alva Johnston biography, 1937
James story
Machen, 1915
Edgar Lee Masters, 1916
Spanish magazine published between 1918-1920
Greece
Raymond Escholier, 1937
Domenicus Theotokopoulos, Greek-born Spanish painter, 1541-1614
tango composer, 1888-1924, author of El cuzquito, Rodríguez Peña, La viruta and other works
Ellery Queen mystery
Graves compilation in two volumes, 1955
here a probable reference to Apollodorus, in whose Library there is an account of the birth of Heracles
Hemingway book on big-game hunting, 1935
Bercilak de Hautdesert, character in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Hudson romance of the South American forest, 1904
Keighley film, 1936
Writer born in the United States who wrote mostly in French, 1900-1998, author of Leviathan, Epaves, Minuit and other works.
Fishburn and Hughes: "A novelist of American origin who wrote both in French and English and is the only foreigner to have been elected to the Académie Française. Green's religious preoccupations, morbid at times, are reflected in his paranoid characters and hallucinatory language. Referring to one of Green's novels, which he praises for the 'rigour of its inventiveness', Borges compares it to Henry James's Turn of the Screw and Kafka's Trial (Preface to Bioy Casares's La invención de Morel)" (82)
Centavo de cordura que me cuesta un millon de arrepentimiento, 1592 pamphlet attributed by Robert Greene which includes an attack on Shakespeare
English novelist and dramatist, 1904-91, author of The Heart of the Matter, A Burnt-Out Case and numerous other works
English playwright, 1558-1592, possible author of an early attack on Shakespeare
city in North Carolina
Jesuit theologian, 1549-1603
Gregory the Great, saint and pope, c. 540-604, author of various epistles, dialogues and homilies
St. Gregory of Nazianzus, Theologus, one of the four great fathers of the Eastern Church, 329-389
German historian and writer, 1821-1891, author of Geschichte der Stadt Rom im Mittelalter, Lucrezia Borgia and other works.
Fishburn and Hughes: "A German historian of Italy, the author of Roman Journals and books about the Papacy and Lucretia Borgia. Gregorovius lived for a time in Ferrara, one of the most important centres of the Papacy. His alleged observation 'that mention of the Phoenix in oral speech was very rare' is probably apocryphal." (82)
Parodi: "“Historia de las filosofías y religiones de Gregorovius”: entre las obras escritas por el historiador alemán Ferdinand Gregorovius (1821-1891) no figura ninguna con ese título. Gregorovius se destaca por sus estudios de historia medieval y renacentista, especialmente de Italia. Su obra más célebre es Historia de la ciudad de Roma en la Edad Media, un estudio sobre el desarrollo político, religioso y cultural de Roma tras la caída del Imperio, desde el siglo v al XVI; Gregorovius trabajó en ella dieciocho años y publicó los ocho volúmenes en 1872. La historiografía moderna sigue considerándola una obra fundamental" (279-80).
Isabella Augusta Persse Gregory, usually known as Lady Gregory, Irish dramatist and folklorist, 1852-1932
Gómez de la Serna witty epigrams, 1911-1955
Baralt work in 6 vols., 1947-1954
Parodi: "esta supuesta obra de Baralt abarca la primera etapa presidencial de Juan D. Perón (1946-1952) y los dos años iniciales de la segunda presidencia (1952-1955); en todo el período, la organización de los sindicatos fue uno de los ejes de la política peronista" (286).
monster in Beowulf
Grettir the Strong, hero of the Icelandic saga Gretla or Grettir Saga
Icelandic saga about the deeds of Grettir the Strong
German translator, 1879-1948, with subsequent career in North America under the name Frederick Philip Grove
character in Gustaf-Janson's Gubben Kommer
Phillpotts, 1921
British writer, 1688-1766
US popular novelist, 1875-1939, author of Desert Gold and numerous other works
Grail legend
Gomperz, 1896-1909
US film director, 1874-1948, director of Birth of a Nation and many other films
British novelist, author of Of Course, Vitelli!, 1938
griffin or gryphon, fabulous animal
publishing house founded in 1962 by Juan Grijalbo
French classical scholar, 1912-1966, author of a Diccionnaire de la mythologie grecque et romaine
perhaps Girolamo Grimaldi, d. 1543
German Orientalist, 1868-1945, author of Die Lehre des Buddha, Buddhistische Weisheit and other works
German linguist and folklorist, 1785-1863, author of Deutsche Grammatik and Deutsche Mythologie, and compiler with his brother Wilhelm, 1786-1859, of the Kinder- und Hausmarchen and Deutschen Sagen
Parodi: "“los cuentos de Grimm”: colección de cuentos populares recopilados por los filólogos y folcloristas alemanes Jacob y Wilhelm Grimm (1785-1863; 1786-1859). Son autores de; de más de doscientos cuentos para niños, de una colección de leyendas históricas y relatos mitológicos germanos, de un Diccionario y una Gramática alemanes, entre varias otras obras" (266).
German writer, 1622-1676, author of Der abenteurliche Simplicissimus Teutsch and other works
didactic poem in the Elder Edda, in which Odin appears as the vagrant Grimnir or "the Masked One"
German diplomat and writer, 1845-1906, author of Der neue Tanhauser, Der Tanhauer in Rom and a biography of Schopenhauer.
Fishburn and Hughes: "A German historian, editor of Schopenhauer’s works in six-volumes, published in 1891. In ‘The History of the Echoes of a Name’ (TL 407) Borges records the words (regarding individual identity) that shortly before his death, Schopenhauer said to Grisebach." (82)
Johann Jakob Griesbach, German Biblical scholar, 1745-1812.
Hauptmann play, 1909
Greenland
warden of prison where Isidro Parodi is held
Parodi:" la segunda autoridad policial del distrito, cumple además funciones de guardián en la Penitenciaría Nacional. Mencionado también en “Goliadkin”; “Toros” y “Sangiácomo”" (41).
Argentine writer, d. 1995, author of El chal violeta y otros relatos
Argentine writer, 1912-1997, author of El grito sagrado and other works
German architect, 1883-1969, founder of Bauhaus
Parodi: "“las fulminaciones de Gropius y de Wright”: el alemán Walter Gropius (1883-1969) y el estadounidense Frank Lloyd Wright (1869-1959), dos arquitectos de fama internacional fueron grandes renovadores de la arquitectura del siglo XX. Wright es célebre por su concepto de la arquitectura orgánica, la funcionalidad de sus diseños, las viviendas estrechamente ligadas a su entorno, su nuevo concepto en los espacios interiores sin cerramientos, los 'módulos' de construcción estandarizados, las viviendas de estructuras modulares, geométricas y de líneas rectas, un estilo que influyó profundamente en Gropius. Walter Gropius fue un arquitecto, urbanista y diseñador alemán, fundador de la famosa escuela de diseño Bauhaus, que dirigió entre 1919 y 1928. En la Bauhaus se formaban arquitectos, pintores, escultores, artesanos (ceramistas, herreros, carpinteros, tejedores, decoradores, etc.), según el concepto de integración de las artes en la arquitectura. La obra de Gropius fue revolucionaria por las nuevas tecnologías de construcción, por los materiales empleados, por el diseño, la inserción social de la arquitectura, el acercamiento al ser humano, conceptos todos tan opuestos al nacionalismo de Hitler, que éste ordenó la clausura de la escuela en 1933" (294-95).
Argentine historian, author of La constitución debe regirnos, 1944, and a pamphlet on Perón
Fishburn and Hughes: "(1867-?). An author of standard Argentine primary-school history texts, such as Nociones de historia argentina (1893) and Curso de historia nacional (1898). Unworthy." (82)
Parodi:" “los infolios de Gandía, de Levene, de Grosso, de Radaelli.”: Enrique de Gandía (1906−1995), fue historiador y miembro de diversas academias. Autor de más de cincuenta títulos, en buena parte relacionados con la historia colonial, es uno de los cinco redactores de la Historia de la Nación dirigida por Ricardo Levene. En Borges, Bioy y Borges se ocupan de él varias veces: lo mencionan entre quienes al hablar se esfuerzan por remedar el acento español y, en 1969, comentan: “El que sigue vivo es Gandía; pero es un peligro para historiadores y políticos, no para nosotros.” (1262). Gandía vuelve a ser mencionado en la crónica de Bustos Domecq “Enfoque” §2. Ricardo Levene (1885−1959), fue un historiador y jurista argentino, miembro de la Academia de la Historia; autor de múltiples obras sobre la historia argentina y director de Historia de la Nación Argentina; desde los orígenes hasta la organización definitiva en 1862, publicada en 14 volúmenes entre 1936 y 1950. Borges y Bioy tampoco muestran aprecio por Levene, de quien dicen: “y ya se sabe lo que valen nuestros historiadores, llámeles finado Levene o diligente Gandía” (Borges 774). Las obras didácticas del historiador Alfredo Bartolomé Grosso (1867−1960), fueron los textos escolares en que varias promociones de estudiantes argentinos aprendieron la historia nacional, especialmente su Nociones de Historia Argentina (1893) y Curso de Historia Nacional (1898), conocidos como el Grosso Grande y el Grosso Chico, que siguieron empleándose en la enseñanza hasta fines de los años cincuenta. Sobre el historiador Sigfrido Augusto Radaelli cf. “Doce” i §1" (85).
Argentine writer, born in France, 1848-1929, director of the Biblioteca Nacional, author of El viaje intelectual and other works and editor of La Biblioteca
French Orientalist and historian, 1885-1952
here mentioned as a German-Jewish surname
El guardián del sepulcro, Kafka play, written in 1916-17
Argentine poet, 1903-1968, author of Mester de judería and other works
Danish poet, statesman and divine, 1783-1872, author of works on the Eddas and Norse mythology as wel as hymns and pamphlets for the Danish church
Russian and Polish Physician.
El rostro verde, Meyrink novel, 1916
Alias of Scharlach in Borges story, derived from Andreas Gryphius, German lyric poet and dramatist, 1616-1664, author of Absurda Comica, Horribilicribrifax and other works.
Fishburn and Hughes: "Possible allusion to Andreas Gryphius (1616-1664), a German lyric poet and dramatist. See Ginzberg." (82)
river in southern Spain, near which a battle was fought in 711 between the Moors and the Visigoths
river in southern Spain.
Fishburn and Hughes: "A river in southern Spain, known as Baetis in Latin and Wadi el-Kebir in Arabic." (82)
church in Palermo in Buenos Aires.
Fishburn and Hughes: "Its original congregation tended to be of members of the patrician class, descendants of the old criollo families, who were hostile to immigrant and middle-class newcomers." (83)
lake in Buenos Aires area
river and city in the province of Entre Ríos.
Fishburn and Hughes: "A rural town and department in the province of Entre Ríos." (83)
city in the province of Entre Ríos.
Fishburn and Hughes: "A town on the river of the same name in the province of Entre Ríos, opposite Fray Bentos. There is considerable interchange between the two cities." (83)
Parodi: "ciudad del sudeste de la provincia de Entre Ríos, ubicada sobre el río Gualeguaychú y distante unos 200 km de Buenos Aires" (414).
bay on which Rio de Janeiro is located
street in Buenos Aires
Parodi: "“el molino marca Guanaco”: molino de viento para extraer agua, provisto de grandes aspas montadas sobre una torre de metal. “Guanaco” era la marca de molinos más empleada en el campo desde principios del siglo XX" (188).
Carriego poem in Las misas herejes
phrase used by G. A. Borgese to refer to D'Annunzio
Fishburn and Hughes: "An Indian dialect, originating in the Amazon delta area, spoken in Paraguay and in some areas of north-east Argentina. Present-day Guaraní contains a large percentage of words derived from Spanish or other foreign languages. While Guaraní is generally used by the poorer Indians and mestizo population living in the countryside, Spanish is spoken by the more affluent criollo population of the cities, who reserve Guaraní for communication with servants. The Duel." (83)
Arreola story
Borges ultraísta poem on the Russian Revolution, now collected in Textos recobrados 1919-1929
Parodi: "“las roquedas de Guarra”: la Sierra y cañones de Guarra se extienden al noreste de Huesca, en el pre pirineo, en la comunidad autónoma de Aragón. Los lugares que se mencionan en el cuento −Labata, Alberuela, Jaca, Ballobar, Magallón− pertenecen ya sea a Aragón o a la provincia de Huesca" (439).
Argentine composer, 1912-2000
country in Central America
street in Buenos Aires
French Guyana
port city in Ecuador.
Fishburn and Hughes: "The largest city in Ecuador, a port on the Pacific south west of the capital Quito, founded in 1536. It was here that on 26 and 27 July 1822 the two great figures of Latin American history, Bolívar and San Martín, met to plan concerted action to expel the final vestiges of Spanish power from Peru. 'Guayaquil' is based on this momentous meeting, and upon the legends surrounding the behaviour of the two great leaders. There is no record of what was said, but San Martín stepped down and handed over the command of his troops to Bolívar. Historians have offered different interpretations of the event. Bolívar's supporters maintain that San Martín's true aim was to secure Guayaquil for Peru and that, if Bolívar refused to accept the offer to serve under him, it was through deference to San Martín. CF 394: The official version offered in Argentine textbooks is that San Martín stepped down as an heroic act of self-abnegation, knowing that his own troops, who were already in Peru, would fight under another general, whereas Bolívar's troops, who were in Ecuador, would be unwilling to move south and fight under another commander, because of their personal attachment to Bolívar. San Martín realised that neither he nor Bolívar could defeat the Spanish alone. He therefore made the sacrifice, knowing that Bolívar would pursue the fight until independence was established. The two great leaders had different priorities and temperaments: Bolívar, who has been likened to Napoleon in his passion and intensity, was a political genius whose aim was to establish democratic republics in the former Spanish 84 colonies; San Martín, compared to Washington for his strength of will and grasp of practicalities, believed that military leaders should keep out of politics and that each country should establish the form of government best suited to itself." (83)
The Old Man's Coming, Gustaf-Janson novel, 1934
Nikolai Gubsky, author of autobiographical works My Double and I and Angry Dust
Gudbrandsdalen, town in Norway
hero of the Volsunga saga
British historian and biographer, 1889-1944.
Fishburn and Hughes: "A witty and irreverent English biographer, author of lives of Wellington (1931) and Churchill (1941)." (84)
French literary critic, 1890-1978
plaza in Buenos Aires
Argentine general from Salta, 1785-1821
French writer, 1886-1951, also known as Shaykh `Abd al-Wahid Yahya, known for his works on Eastern metaphysics
French poet, 1810-1839, author of Le Centaure
family in Proust's Recherche
Thucydides history of the war between Athens and Sparta
Argentine film, 1942, on the independence war in Salta
Lugones historical work, 1905
Fishburn and Hughes: "The 'great war' which took place between the two main opposing parties of Uruguay, the Blancos, led by Oribe and backed by Rosas, and the Colorado forces of Rivera, lieutenant of Artigas, supported by the Argentine Unitarians. CF 375: The second phase of the war, from 1843 to 1851, was known as the Great Siege and consisted mainly of the Blancos' siege of Montevideo, which thereby earned the epithet 'New Troy'. The Elderly Lady." (84)
Portuguese writer, 1850-1923
Voina i mir, Tolstoi novel, 1865-69
woman to whom Borges dedicated various poems, later reduced to her initials, C. G.
friend and collaborator of Borges, co-editor of the Manual de zoología fantástica, 1953, and the Libro de los seres imaginarios, 1967
Spanish priest who lived for a time in Argentina and Paraguay, 1719-1806
New York foundation
Alleged pig raising guide which Sampaio writes by hand. (Mentioned in Bustos Domecq piece.)
Italian historian, 1483-1540
Joad, 1936
Wells, 1941
Joad, 1938
Argentine poet and journalist, 1827-1918
Argentine military man and diplomat, 1788-1866
Argentine writer included in the Exposición de la actual poesía argentina
character in Shakespeare's Hamlet
County town of Surrey, England.
Rossini opera, 1829
Peruvian poet, 1897-1935
William the Conqueror, English king, 1027?-1087, also called Guillermo el Bastardo and Guillermo de Normandía
William II was the last German Emperor (Kaiser) and King of Prussia, ruling the German Empire and the Kingdom of Prussia from 15 June 1888 to 9 November 1918.
scholar cited in Bustos Domecq's preface to Suarez Lynch, a reference to Homero Guglielmini, Argentine professor, essayist, poet, dramatist and journalist, 1903-1968
Parodi: "“Virgilio Guillermone, que lo había retenido en la memoria para uso personal y que ya no lo precisaba por haber engrosado la cofradía del bardo Gongo”: el nombre del supuesto literato Virgilio Guillermone está construido sobre el del escritor Homero Guglielmini (1903-1968) ensayista, docente, periodista y autor teatral; uno de los fundadores y luego director de la revista Inicial (1923-1926). Guglielmini, que en los años veinte militaba en la izquierda universitaria, adoptó en los 40 una posición nacionalista de activo apoyo al gobierno de Juan Perón. De ahí la afirmación de Bustos Domecq de que ‘Guillermone’ había “engrosado la cofradía del bardo Gongo”, o sea que se había pasado al bando católico y peronista del poeta ‘Gongo’, nombre tras el cual se oculta el de Osvaldo H. Dondo (1902-1962), escritor que en esa época organizaba los Cursos de Cultura Católica, de orientación tomista, ofrecidos por la Universidad Católica de Buenos Aires. En el Índice a Borges, Daniel Martino, apunta: “Dondo, Osvaldo H.: Escr. Esquemas en el silencio (1927), Oda menor a la poesía (1957). Borges y Bioy Casares lo parodiaron como ‘el Bardo Gongo’. (Un modelo para la muerte).” En 1927 Borges publicó una cauta reseña del libro de Dondo Esquemas en el silencio (“Osvaldo Horacio Dondo” TR 1: 333-334)" (170-71).
boar in Scandinavian mythology
British actor, 1914-2000
son of Ricardo Güiraldes
Argentine novelist and poet, 1886-1927, best known for Don Segundo Sombra
Collection of short stories by Adolfo Bioy Casares, 1959.
poem from Pedro Leandro Ipuche’s Júbilo y miedo
Carriego poem in Las misas herejes
Esteban Echeverria's poem
poem from Pedro Leandro Ipuche’s Júbilo y miedo
rooster in Norse mythology that awakens the heroes at Ragnarök
Swift satirical work, 1726
character in Swift romance
The Mystical Rose Garden of Mahmud Shabistari, c.1320.
Fishburn and Hughes: "The House of Roses, completed in 1317 by Mahmud Shabistari, one of the most important philosophical poems in the Persian language. More than thirty commentaries on it are extant; the best known, by Lahiji, is the basis of an English version by E.H. Whinfield, Gulshan i Raiz: the Mystic Rose Garden (London, 1880). There is no mention of the Zahir in Lahiji's commentary." (84)
character in Hudson's The Purple Land
Graham Greene, novel, 1936.
character in Garnett's The Sailor's Return, 1925
pseud. of Friedrich Gundelfinger, German writer, 1880-1931, disciple of Stefan George and author of studies of Goethe, George, and Shakespeare und der deutsche Geist
character in the Volsunga Saga
character in the Njals Saga, also referred to as Gunnar de Hlidarendi
Icelandic writer, 1889-1975
character in the Gunnlaugssaga Ormstungu
Icelandic skald and warrior
king in Borges story
warrior mentioned in runic inscription
Icelandic saga about the rivalry of Gunnlaug and Hrafn for the love of Helga
character in the Nibelungenlied
German poet, 1695-1723
Fishburn and Hughes: "A term used by natives of Rio de la Plata for 'child' or 'little one', here translated as ‘poor little mestizo bastard’ (CF 224). The Other Death." (84)
street in Buenos Aires
Swedish writer and filmmaker, 1902-1993
Gustavus II Adolphus of Sweden, Swedish king, 1594-1632
town in Kentucky
characters in Borges story, see Gutre
also known as Godrum, king of East Anglia, conquered by Alfred the Great and then baptized, d. 890
Mexican poet, 1859-95
Spanish poet and painter, 1886-1945
brother of Eduardo
Argentine popular novelist, 1851-1889, author of Juan Moreira, Hormiga Negra and other works.
Fishburn and Hughes: "An Argentine journalist and novelist who espoused the cause of the gaucho. He is chiefly remembered for his novel on the semi-mythical gaucho hero Juan Moreira, but he was also a chronicler of everyday life in Buenos Aires." (84)
Argentine statesman, writer and journalist, 1809-1876
Argentine poet, 1838-96, author of La fibra salvaje, "El Misionero," "La oracion" and other works, brother of Eduardo
characters in Borges story
Gunnar's half-brother
French philosopher, 1854-1888, author of L'Irreligion de l'avenir, La Genèse de l'idée de temps and other works
Gujarat, region of India.
Fishburn and Hughes: "A region in western India bordering the Arabian Sea." (84)
Alemán picaresque novel, 1599 and 1602
city in India, in the state of Madhya Pradesh
Plato tale retold by Wells in The Invisible Man
the Beguiling of Gylfi, part of Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda, which includes stories about the beginning and end of the world
Swedish king who disguises himself as an old man named Gangleri in the Gylfaginning, part of the Prose Edda
Norwegian peasant, character in Ibsen play
pseud. of Marie-Antoinette de Riquetti de Mirabeau, French comic and satirical novelist, 1850-1932