R. U. R.
Capek play about robots, 1921
Capek play about robots, 1921
Egyptian sun god
character in Bustos Domecq story
English abridgement of a German work by Johann Andreas Eisenmenger, with a prefatory study by John Peter Stehelin, 1748
French writer and physician, c. 1490-1533, author of Gargantua and Pantagruel
Prussian spy in Borges story, also known as Viktor Runeberg; perhaps kin to the German satirist Gottlieb Wilhelm Rabener, 1714-1771
Leonhard Frank novel, 1914
owner of Grandes Sastrerías Inglesas Rabuffi, in Bustos Domecq story
French writer, pseud. of Marguerite Vallette-Eymery, 1860-1953
French dramatist, 1639-99, author of Phèdre, Andromaque and other works
English pirate captain, c. 1682-1720, known as Calico Jack
Argentine poet, critic and editor, author of Hombre callado, editor of Correspondencia and co-editor of anthology La novísima poesía argentina, 1931
Rhadamanthus, in Greek mythology one of the judges in Hades
Indian philosopher, 1888-1975
Martínez Estrada book on Argentine culture, 1933
king of the Angles, mentioned by Venerable Bede
Rafaello Sanzio, Italian painter and architect, 1483-1520
US actor, 1895-1980
French writer, author of Le Métier de vivre and Sens unique
of Aceite Raggio, in Bustos Domecq story
Scandinavian myth of the twilight of the gods
Viking hero of Icelandic saga
Icelandic saga, c. 1100
hotel in Suárez Lynch novella
Gautama Buddha's son
island mentioned in Lane translation of Arabian Nights, perhaps Borneo
French writer, translator of Faulkner
D. H. Lawrence novel, 1915
British character actor, 1889-1967
Antero de Quental poems, 1892
Fernández Moreno
Ralegh, English soldier, explorer, courtier and man of letters, 1552-1618
English scholar, poet and author (1861-1922).
Gernsback science fiction novel, 1950
hero of Ramayana
Hindu religious leader, devoted to Vishnu, 1017-1137
Hindu sacred book
Italian commentator on Dante, d. 1390, author of Comentum super Dantis Aligherii Comediam
the boardwalk in Necochea
composer of waltzes including Vals Boston
character in Borges-Bioy filmscript
friend of Borges, Hugo Rodríguez Moroni in some editions
Argentine caudillo, 1786-1821, governor of Entre Ríos
Argentine general and politician, 1884-1962
João de Deus book of poems, 1869, here called Camino de flores
town in western Buenos Aires
Argentinian Historian. Author of Historia de la Nación Argentina.
Argentine historian and psychiatrist, 1849-1914, author of Rosas y su tiempo
Swiss writer, 1878-1947
Icelandic sea goddess
Camba humorous articles, 1920
character in Bustos Domecq story
Silva Valdés poem
Langon, former name of capital of Burma or Myanmar
German editor and translator of Eddas
German historian, 1795-1886
printer mentioned in Bustos Domecq story
character in C. S. Lewis's Perelandra
US poet, critic and editor, 1888-1974
town near Genoa, Italy
Cocteau, 1926.
US film director, 1898-1999, director of The Now Voyager
character in Borges-Bioy filmscript
Rashidu'd-Din Fadlu'llah, Persian vizier and historian, d. 1318, author of the Jami'u't- Tawarikh, a history of the Mongols which also includes summaries of the history of India, China and Europe
Akutagawa story, later adapted as a film by Kurosawa
main character in Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment
section of Sarmiento's Facundo
Work by Ramón Gómez de la Serna, 1915.
Bianco novella, 1944
British playwright
Lenormand play, 1920
Organization founded in the United Kingdon in 1885 by a group of free thinkers. It was originally called the Rationalist Press Association. In 2002 it chaged its name and it currently publishes a bi-monthly magazine, the New Humanist.
Lovecraft story
Argentine poet, 1903-1992, president of the SADE (Sociedad Argentina de Escritores) in the 1970s
character in Wells's The Brothers
German translation of classical Chinese novel
Friedrich Rauch, German soldier and Indian fighter in Argentina, 1790-1829
Abba ben Joseph bar Hama, rabbi, 270-350, mentioned in Talmud
Poe’s collection of poems, 1845.
Poe poem, 1845
Ravenna, city in Italy near Venice
Cortázar, 1963.
Francisco Espínola stories, 1933
Silvina Ocampo’s short story published in La Furia (1959).
goddess Reason during French Revolution
Buenos Aires afternoon newspaper
Uruguayan newspaper
character in Conrad's Under Western Eyes
Uruguayan folk and tango musician, 1887-1960, best known for his work in collaboration with Carlos Gardel
English pirate, c. 1690-c. 1714
Spanish Academy, founded in 1713, which publishes the Diccionario de la Real Academia Española and the Gramática de la Real Academia Española (among other things)
Liddell Hart book, 1930, later republished as A History of the World War (1914-1918)
knife-fighter, character in Borges stories
knife-fighter
Santayana book, part of The Realms of Being, 1927-40
Santayana book, part of The Realms of Being, 1927-40
Santayana book, part of The Realms of Being, 1927-40
scene designer
Santayana, 1903
Santayana, first volume of The Life of Reason
Santayana, third volume of The Life of Reason
Santayana, fifth volume of The Life of Reason, 1906
Santayana, second volume of The Life of Reason, 1905-06
French writer (1619-1692) known for his Historiettes.
Last name of a commission agent of whom one of the characters (Molineros) expected to get some discount (in Spanish: “rebaja”, cf. the play on words). (Mentioned in Bustos Domecq story.)
French writer, author of Un Grand precurseur des romantiques, Ramond, M. Bainville contre l'histoire de France, Notes sur la morale d'une "annonciatrice," and other works
Bonfanti
Puga y Calsanz
character in Borges story
Clodomiro Ruiz's first book
Balzac philosophical novel, 1834
German publisher, 1807-1896, editor of the Universalbibliothek
cemetery in Buenos Aires, also the name of the surrounding neighborhood
street in central Buenos Aires
old arched building in the center of Buenos Aires, destroyed in the building of the Plaza de Mayo
Reyes essay in Reloj de sol
Horacio Eduardo Rosales book of poems, 1966, written at age nine
Sarmiento autobiography, 1850
Novel by Elena Garro (1963).
Baron de la Roche poem
Baudelaire sonnet, 1861
Crane novel, 1895
river in Michigan
Hammett novel, 1929
character in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass
"repetida viuda," widow of several gangsters
Heinlein science fiction, 1949
Steinbeck short novel, 1937
Phillpotts novel, 1922
river in Louisiana
Fichte nationalist treatise, 1808
Buber, 1910
Excerpt from de Indian Antiquary 1, 1872.
designer
Refr Gestsson, 11th century Icelandic poet, son of Steinunn
Ascasubi poem in Paulino Lucero
Spanish avant garde magazine edited by José de Ciria y Escalante, 1920
Marcus Aurelius autobiography written in Greek, Τὰ εἰς ἑαυτόν, English title Meditations
Lugones book on Argentine school reform, 1903
Argentine poet and writer, 1899-1957
Lugones poem in Romances del Río Seco
city in Bavaria in Germany, ancient Ratisbona
character in the Volsunga Saga
pseudonym of José Maria dos Reis Pereira, Portuguese writer, 1901-1969
French symbolist poet, 1864-1936
Uruguayan physician, poet and playwright, 1860-1929, author of El gaucho and La tapera
Julien Benda memoirs, 1937
Marcus Atilius Regulus, Roman general in the First Punic War who sacrificed himself to the Carthaginians for the sake of Rome, d. c.250 B.C.
C. S. Lewis book, 1939
seat of German government in Berlin
German editor and translator, mentioned here à propos of his edition of Jean Paul's Traumdichtungen
Reykjavik, capital city of Iceland
Mehring treatise on rhyme, 1891
city in northern France
Russian-Argentine physician, friend of Alberto Gerchunoff's
four brothers, Jose Vicente, 1782-1837, Francisco Isidoro, 1796-1840, Jose Antonio, 1798-1837 and Guillermo, 1799-1837, Argentine caudillos in Córdoba in the time of Rosas and Facundo Quiroga
Austrian-born US film director and actor, 1873-1943
underworld
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
author of a book on Anatole France published in Buenos Aires in 1944
Jubilate Agno, Christopher Smart poem used by Benjamin Britten as the text for a festival cantata
Hsi Yu Chi, Wu Ch´eng-en's Journey to the West or Monkey, classical Chinese novel, 1590s
Murena’s book of poetry, 1962.
Defoe, 1706
popular book about Einstein, by author who signed with initials C. W. W., published by the Technical Press in London in 1937
Kafka anthology
Browne work on religion, science and philosophy, 1642
Koeppen, 1857
Vandier study (with Henri-Charles Puech and René Dussaud), 1944
Kant's Religion within the Boundaries of Pure Reason, 1793-94
George Bernard Shaw speeches, edited in 1965 by Warren Sylvester Smith
Percy anthology of ballads and other poems, 1765
Eça de Queiroz satirical novel about Catholicism, 1887
Antonio Guevara, 1529
Reyes book of short essays, 1926, the fifth series of Simpatías y diferencias
German novelist, 1897-1970, author of Im Westen nichts Neues
Dutch painter and engraver, 1606-69
Remus, in Roman legend, twin brother of Romulus
fabulous fish mentioned by Pliny
Borges poem in Fervor de Buenos Aires, 1923
Borges poem in Luna de enfrente
French philosopher and writer, 1823-1892, author of Averroes et l'Averroisme, Vie de Jesus, Les Origines du Christianisme and numerous other works
French writer, 1864-1910, author of Poil de Carotte, a Journal and other works
Short Story written by Roberto Artl. Early version of "Judas Iscarioti", the fourth part of El juguete rabioso.
French painter, 1841-1919
French philosopher, 1815-1903, author of Essais de critique générale, Les dilemmes de la métaphysique pure, Histoire et solution des problèmes métaphysiques and other works
soccer player, character in Bustos Domecq story
thug in Buenos Aires
half-owner of the Hotel El Nuevo Imparcial in Bustos Domecq and Suárez Lynch
highway in Bustos Domecq story
“se parecía un poco a Repetto, pero con barba”. This last name evokes an important figure of the period; Nicolás Repetto (1871-1965) was a politician, a doctor and one of the most relevant leaderships of the Socialist Party. He was a representative and a candidate to the Vice-Presidency. In 1946, he was associated with Spruille Braden in the Unión Democrática created against President Perón. (Mentioned in Bustos Domecq story.)
Descanso de la tripulación, Joseph Kessel novel, 1935
Elvira de Alvear book
Lugones, section of Las montañas de oro
Emerson essays on Plato, Swedenborg, Montaigne, Shakespeare, Napoleon and Goethe, 1850
US artist, poet and writer, 1895-1990, author of Zen Flesh, Zen Bones
Plato dialogue on political philosophy
book by Gustavo Thorlichen
Dominican Republic
family in Balvanera neighborhood
character in Bustos Domecq story
grill in Suárez Lynch novella
Stevenson poem that later served as his epitaph
Faulkner, novel, 1951.
Georges Simenon novel, 1938
Carriego poem in Las misas herejes
city on the Paraná River in northern Argentina, capital of Chaco province
González Lanuza poem
Darío poem in Prosas profanas, 1896
According to Cuentos breves y extraordinarios excerpt from chapter XXIX from the Ta'anit.
Fernando Namora memoir, 1949 and 1963
train station in Buenos Aires and the surrounding neighborhood
ranch
Aristotle's Rhetoric
Gerchunoff essay on Cervantes, 1951
López Velarde poem
Jean François Paul de Gondi, 1613-1679, archbishop of Paris
Baudelaire poem
Revelation of St. John in the Bible, sometimes called Apocalipsis
Baldomero Fernández Moreno poem
French poet, 1889-1960, associated with cubism and surrealism
periodical published in Buenos Aires, 1868-1872, 1880-1882
Mexican literary magazine of the modernist movement, 1894-1896, edited by Manuel Gutiérrez Nájera
Journal published by Universidad de Buenos Aires
Spanish literary review, founded by Ortega y Gasset in 1923
magazine edited by Hilario Ascasubi and José Arenales
Buenos Aires periodical, 1871-1877, to which José Hernández was a contributor
Play by Villiers de l'Isle Adam, 1870.
French scholar of Japanese literature, 1867-1947
periodical published in Paris, 1922-1932, previously Le Bulletin de l'Amérique Latine, 1910-1922
French literary magazine published in Montpellier since 1870 in which Pierre Menard published several articles in 1909
French periodical in the 1920s and 1930s
Geneva periodical in the early twentieth century, often cited for an Ernest Ansermet article on jazz in 1919
periodical edited by Lugones in Paris, 1911-1914
king of the dead in Buddhism
Ecuadorean historian, author of Campaña del Ecuador
Farid ud-din Attar
in the Bible, the two books of Kings, sometimes also the two books of Samuel
Fernando II de Aragon, 1452-1516, and Isabel I de Castilla, 1451-1504
Mexican man of letters and diplomat, 1889-1959, author of Reloj de sol, Visión de Anáhuac, Capítulos de literatura española, Simpatías y diferencias, El suicida and numerous other works
Cortázar, poetry, 1949.
Chilean writer, 1889-1970, who participated in the first Proa; mentioned in Inquisiciones for his 1923 book of poems Barco ebrio
place in Iceland, residence of Snorri Sturluson
Uruguayan novelist, 1868-1936, author of El embrujo de Sevilla and numerous other works
son of the novelist
English progressive writer, 1905-1958, co-editor of Prison Anthology, 1938
town in Calabria in northern Spain, mentioned in poem by Baldomero Fernández Moreno
a poultry farmer in a Bustos Domecq story
António Benedito de Castro, Portuguese nobleman, friend of Eça de Queiroz
Rhine River
state in United States
pseudonym of Cecil Street, British officer and writer of crime fiction, 1884-1965
British scholar, 1843-1922, author of Buddhist India and Dialogues of the Buddha
British author, 1859-1946, the founding editor of Everyman's Library
small river which flows into the River Plate at Buenos Aires, at La Boca
Nickname of Fingermann´s sister. Fingermann is the Jewish character of the story. The sound of the name plays with the Jewish pronunciation of the name “Rebeca”. (Character mentioned in Suárez Lynch novella.)
Portuguese writer, 1885-1963, author of Terras do Demo
Portuguese writer, 1482-1552, author of Menina e moça
Tomás Antonio Ribeiro Ferreira, Portuguese poet, politician and journalist, 1831-1901
street in Buenos Aires near the River Plate, perhaps the present street 25 de mayo
doctor in Borges story
Spanish painter, 1591-1652, here mistakenly spelled Riera
British soldier mentioned in Chesterton's poem Lepanto
study by Giovanni Previtali, 1963
Richard the Third, king of England, 1452-1485, subject of a Shakespeare play
Richard the First, the Lion-Hearted, king of England, 1157-99
British political economist, 1772-1823
Italian publisher, b. 1931, publisher of FMR
Italian Jesuit missionary to China, 1552-1610, author of theological and polemical works in Chinese
US playwright, pseud. of Elmer L. Reizenstein, 1892-1967
Arnold Bennett, 1923
Baptist minister and translator from the Chinese, 1845-1919
friend of T. E. Lawrence from university days, 1886-1968, author of Portrait of T. E. Lawrence
English actor, 1902-83
English novelist, 1689-1761, author of Pamela, Clarissa and The History of Sir Charles Grandison
Belloc, 1929
Armand Jean du Plessie de Richelieu, French clergyman and political figure, 1585-1642
French poet, novelist and dramatist, 1849-1926
park in London
German physician who argued for extraterrestrial origin of life, the panspermia theory, author of Der Darwinische Lehre, 1865
German novelist usually called Jean Paul, 1763-1825, author of Hesperus and other works
British critic, 1866-1931, author of Oscar Wilde, Recollections, 1932
Synge short play, 1904
US writer, 1901-91
German mathematician, 1826-66
Roman popular leader, c. 1313-1354
soldier in the Trojan War, character in the Aeneid and Paradiso
mountains where the hippogriff comes from
one of the four sacred Vedic books of the Hindus
character in Bustos Domecq, "el hombre torpedo"
actor
Verdi opera, 1851
character in Verdi opera of the same name
the Lay of Rig, in a manuscript of the Prose Edda
Maurice Betz collection and translation, 1937
Austrian poet and novelist, born in Prague, 1875-1926, author of Die Aufzeichnungen des Malte Laurids Brigge, Duineser Elegien, Sonette an Orpheus and other works
a long didactic poem by Pedro López de Ayala, c. 1380
Roland de Renéville, 1929
French poet, 1854-91, author of Une Saison en enfer, Les Illuminations, Le Bateau Ivre and other works
town in Italy
ranch belonging to Adolfo Bioy Casares in Pardo, Partido de Las Flores, Province of Buenos Aires
Cervantes exemplary novel
Browning long poem, 1868-69
Wagner cycle of operas, 1848-74
former capital of Brazil
Cunninghame Graham stories in Spanish translation, 1914
the Rajatarangini or River of Kings, a Sanskrit chronicle of the kings of Kashmir by Kalana, 1148 A.D.
one of the marvels of the realm of Prester John
verse in Cansinos-Asséns poem Crepúsculo
state in southern Brazil
hot springs area in Santiago del Estero
port town near La Plata in the province of Buenos Aires
Department of the Province of Córdoba, Argentina.
town in Argentina near Córdoba
street in Buenos Aires, named for city in Ecuador
Argentine province
a knife-fighter in Buenos Aires
Argentine painter, 1874-1968
Spanish conquistador (s. XVI)
Garfias haiku
Saki’s work, 1900.
Uruguayan writer and diplomat, 1904-1981, author of Arquitecturas del insomnio: cuentos fantásticos
projected book of Borges's ultraísta poems, never published, also called Himnos rojos or Salmos rojos
German Protestant theologian, 1822-1889
German philosopher, 1791-1869, co-author with Ludwig Preller of Historia philosophiae graecae et romanae ex fontium locis contexta
German geographer, 1779-1859, author of Die Erdkunde
Dürer engraving
Spanish publisher, 1805-1872, founder and editor of the Biblioteca de Autores Españoles
street in Buenos Aires that marks the division between the northern and southern parts of the city
tomb of and monument to Bernardino Rivadavia in the Plaza Miserere, by the Once train station in Buenos Aires
hospital in Buenos Aires
gambler mentioned in Bustos Domecq story
character in Borges story
Spanish poet and critic, 1893-1960, brother of José Rivas Panedas
Spanish poet, 1898-1944
city in Uruguay on the Brazilian border, adjoining Sant'Anna do Livramento
street in Buenos Aires, now called Córdoba
Argentine poet and political writer, 1814-1844, author of Tablas de sangre
Mexican painter, 1886-1957
Uruguayan general and politician, 1788-1854
Mediterranean coast of France and Italy
neighborhood in New York City, site of a gang battle involving Monk Eastman
character in Radclyffe Hall's The Sixth Beatitude
Whale film, 1937
Frost poem
Agatha Christie, poetry, 1925.
Padraic Colum, 1926
Ellis study of death in Old Norse literature, 1943
Camino a Mandalay, Kipling poem
Lowes book on Coleridge's Kubla Khan, 1927
Aldington stories, 1930
the Lost Colony founded by Sir Walter Raleigh in North Carolina
Untermeyer poems, 1923
Chesterton study, 1905
Walter Raleigh essay, 1895.
Chesterton study, 1927
character in Bustos Domecq story
English writer, 1892-1976, author of Twenty-Six Poems, 1917, here the author of a review of The Approach to Al-Mutasim
English divine, 1816-1853, author of five volumes of sermons and an Analysis of Tennyson's In Memoriam
British journalist and politician, 1856-1933
British merchant, traveller and writer on Argentina and Paraguay, 1792-1843
Scottish churchman and historian, 1721-1793, author of histories of Scotland and the English colonies in America
US actor and singer, 1898-1976
Belloc, 1928
French revolutionary leader, 1758-1794
legendary hero of 12th century England
Defoe romance, 1719
US poet, 1869-1935
fabulous bird in the Arabian Nights and other texts
Lugones biography of Julio A. Roca, 1938
here, a mistake that Borges notices in a French dictionary which meant to refer to Julio A. Roca
Argentine general and president, 1843-1914, leader of the "Conquest of the Desert"
Spanish chemist (1873-1941)
Argentine politician and writer, 1838-1921
Don Quijote's horse
Eliot verse play, 1934
here a reference to the Rockefeller Foundation
Rhone river
island of Rhodes in the Aegean
French sculptor, 1840-1917
Conan Doyle, novel, 1896.
Uruguayan essayist, 1871-1917, author of Ariel and Motivos de Proteo
place mentioned in the Orlando Furioso
Visigothic king of Spain at the time of the Moorish invasion in 711
Spanish literary scholar, 1855-1943
Uruguayan scholar, 1921-1985, author of Jorge Luis Borges: A Literary Biography and many other works
Spanish writer, 1848-1922, author of a Diccionario completo de la lengua española, Cría de gansos, Estudio de tecnología, Pedagogía social and other works
street in Buenos Aires
Greco tango celebrating the dance hall "Salón San Martín" on Rodríguez Peña street
knife-fighter in Buenos Aires
baron, character in Jaromir Hladík's Los enemigos, name based on that of town in the Czech Republic now known as Rymarov
"Beautiful Cigar Girl," murder victim, 1820-1841, model for Poe's Marie Rogêt
English poet, 1763-1855, author of a volume of Recollections
character in Poe story
seems to refer to Ari Thorgilsson, Icelandic writer, b. 1067, co-author with Hallr Thorarinsson of the Hattalykill or Aettartala
Hugh Walpole novel, 1930, a chronicle of the Herries family, first of a four volume series that culminates in Vanessa, 1933
Wilkie Collins
Argentine writer, 1893-?
German author, author of Argentinien, 1937, and of Die La Plata Länder: Argentinien, Paraguay, Uruguay, 1963
German literary scholar, 1885-?, responsible for lamentable second edition of Vilmar's history of German literature
town in the province of Buenos Aires near Pergamino
Argentine poet and essayist, 1896-1956, author of La metáfora y el mundo, El perfil de nuestra expresión and other works
Argentine poet, at some point a director of propaganda for the Argentine army
character in Borges-Bioy filmscript
character in Borges-Bioy filmscript
Spanish writer, c. 1465-1541, author of the Celestina
Argentine literary historian, critic and poet, 1882-1957, author of Historia de la literatura argentina and numerous other works
Red Sea
Konrad's Middle High German translation of the Chanson de Roland
Argentine poet, dramatist and orator, 1873-1922
leader of Norse invaders of Normandy
French poet and essayist, 1903-1962
French writer, 1866-1955, known for writings on pacifism and Indian philosophy
Rome, capital of Italy, here sometimes "la Ciudad de los Césares," "Romeburg" and so on
French poet and writer, pseudonym of Louis Henri Jean Farigoule, 1885-1972
French allegorical romance in two parts: first part, c.1240, by Guillaume de Lorris; second part, c.1280, by Jean de Meung
Queen mystery, 1930
Laurence Echard, 1696
Argentine writer and journalist, 1908-1981
Maurice Abramowicz prose piece
Alonso Lopez e Bayão, 15th century
Lugones poem in Romancero
Book written by Vicente Rossi in 1944
Lugones poem in Romancero
traditional Spanish ballads
Lugones book of poems, 1924
Spanish ballads
Spanish ballads about the Cid
Spanish ballads with Moorish themes
Lugones posthumous book of poems, 1938
Jacques Chardonne, 1937
perhaps refers to Pliny's Naturalis historia
Paul's Epistle to the Romans in the New Testament
Mowat, 1935
Lugones poem in Los crepúsculos del jardín
Lugones series of poems in Las horas doradas
Heine book of poems, 1851
Argentine police officer and historian, co-author of the Diccionario histórico argentino, author of histories of Chascomús, Monserrat and of the Argentine police
Anglo-Saxon name for Rome. See Roma
character in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet
Shakespeare tragedy, c. 1595
author of article on Mach in Proa
Argentine historian, 1909-77
a gunfighter mentioned in popular verses
Romulus, in Roman legend, the founder of Rome and twin brother of Remus
town in northern Spain in which Charlemagne was defeated and Roland lost his life
co-editor of El tema del tango en la la literatura argentina, 1969
town in southern Spain
Argentine general and politician, 1773-1844
French poet, 1524?-1585
Virginia Woolf essay on women's intellectual work, translated by Borges
Forster novel set in Florence, 1908
US political leader, 1884-1962
U. S. president, 1882-1945
U. S. president, 1858-1919
Emil Ludwig, 1938
fabulous animal of North America
Argentine merchant ship on which Ascasubi worked in 1819
Hauptmann play, 1903
Zorrilla, 1857.
Gerardo Diego poem
the canonical book of Hakim, "al-Moqanna," the Veiled Prophet of Khorasan
Borges book of poetry, 1975.
Borges poem in El otro, el mismo
Portuguese writer and painter, b. 1924, here surnamed Roa by mistake
Argentine poet whose book Los recuerdos de la tierra, published at age nine, had a preface by Borges
Spanish poet and literary critic, 1910-1992
character in Borges-Bioy filmscript
Rosalind, character in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet
second city of Argentina, in province of Santa Fe
Unamuno sonnet sequence
Book written by the general officer Tomás de Iriarte
Ramos Mejía historical study, 1907
Juan Pablo Echagüe historical play
Argentine general and politician, governor of Buenos Aires and dictator of the Argentine confederation, 1793-1877, sometimes spelled Rozas, also known as "Héroe del Desierto" and "Restaurador de las Leyes"
Fernández Moreno poem
Roscellinus, French scholastic philosopher, c. 1045-c. 1120
county in Ireland
Quain story in Statements, 1939, a source of "Las ruinas circulares"
Williams play, 1950
French Catholic magazine of the early twentieth century
rose garden in Palermo Park, Buenos Aires
German Nazi leader, 1893-1946
character in Bustos Domecq story
here given as an example of a German-Jewish surname
character in Shakespeare's Hamlet
David Jerusalem poem
US journalist and music critic, 1890-1946, one of the editors of The American Caravan in 1927
character in Nazi children's book
character in Borges story
pianist, character in Borges story
street in Buenos Aires
Joseph Henri Honoré Boex, 1856-1940, Belgian-born writer of science fiction, here misspelled Rosney
Scottish divine, one of the chaplains of Charles I , author of Virgilius Evangelizans, 1634
Another pseudonym of Frederic Dannay (Daniel Nathan, 1905-1982) and Manfred Bennington Lee (Manford Lepofsky, 1905-1971), creators of Ellery Queen.
Canadian journalist and art critic, 1869-1918, Wilde's literary executor
English poet, sister of Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1830-1894
English poet and painter, 1828-82, author of The Blessed Damozel, Eden Bower, The House of Life, Sudden Light and other works
Italian painter, 1909-1994, author of Buenos Aires en tinta china, 1951
Italian critic, editor of the Discorso di Giacopo Mazzoni in difesa della "Commedia" del divino poeta Dante, 1898
Uruguayan critic and historian, 1871-1945, author of Cosas de negros and Folletos lenguaraces
Argentine poet and tango composer, b. 1925
character in Kafka's Amerika
French poet and dramatist, 1868-1918, author of Cyrano de Bergerac, Chantecler and other works
Ruckert poem on the struggle between father and son, drawn from the Shah-nama, 1838
Henry Miller trilogy of novels, Sexus, Plexus and Nexus
character in Borges story
German Lutheran theologian, 1799-1867, author of Theologische Ethik, Die Anfange der christlichen Kirche und ihrer Verfassung, Dogmatik and other works
English painter, 1872-1945
may refer to any of a series of European financiers and noblemen
French writer, 1613-80, known for his maxims
city in France, ancient capital of Normandy, called Rudhaborg by the Vikings
Twain memoir of life in California and Nevada, 1872
series of Zola novels, 1871-1893
pseudonymous author of Tyrant of the Andes, 1936, about Juan Vicente Gómez
British teacher who pioneered new method of teaching Greek and Latin, 1863-1950, author of works on Homer, Shakespeare and Indian folktales and one of the early editors of the Loeb Classical Library
Swiss-French philosopher, writer, political theorist and composer, 1712-1778, author of Emile, the Nouvelle Heloïse, Confessions and many other works
pharmacist, character in Borges-Levinson story
character in Borges-Bioy filmscript
Uruguayan writer, 1861-1926, author of a vast Historia de la literatura uruguaya
hotel or restaurant in Borges-Levinson story
London
restaurant in Buenos Aires much frequented by the modernist writers
famous tango bar in the 1920's, on Corrientes
US philosopher, 1855-1916, author of The World and the Individual and other works
character in Hudson's The Purple Land
Spirit, in Hebrew, as in Ruach Elohim, the Spirit of God
FitzGerald translation, 1859, translated into Spanish by Jorge Guillermo Borges
Flemish painter, 1577-1640
character in Bustos Domecq story
shallow river of northeastern Italy, crossed by Julius Caesar in 49 B. C. in defiance of the Senate
German expressionist poet, critic and essayist, 1881-1920
character in Borges story
character in Borges story
character in Borges story
German Orientalist scholar and poet, 1788-1866, author of Liebesfruhling, Ostliche Rosen, Ghaselen, Rostem und Suhrab and other works
It might be an extravagant way to refer to “rowing club” (“club de remo”) by playing with German words. (Mentioned in Bustos Domecq story.)
Rüdeger, character in the Nibelungenlied
George MacMunn study, 1937
Enrique González Tuñón poems, 1928
German literary scholar, author of Jenseitsvorstellungen vor Dante, Dantes Divina Commedia and works on Cervantes, Shakespeare, Camões, Homer and Keyserling
character in Borges story
character in Borges story
town in Warwickshire, England
character in Dante
character in Ariosto's Orlando furioso and Orlando innamorato
character in Ellery Queen novel
Old English poem in the Exeter Book
Borges story, 1940, included in Ficciones
Volney book, 1791
Spanish priest and writer, 1861-1934
Argentine writer, 1900-1974, author of popular fiction associated with the Boedo group
character in Bustos Domecq and Suárez Lynch stories, later Mariana Ruiz Villalba de Anglada
Pumita, character in Bustos Domecq story
character in Bustos Domecq story
Savastano doctoral dissertation, 1971
"el Remiendo," character in Bustos Domecq story
Arcipreste de Hita, c. 1293-c. 1350, author of El libro de Buen Amor
Mexican writer, 1917-86, author of El llano en llamas and Pedro Páramo
Swedish theologian, character in Borges story, author of Kristus och Judas and Den hemlige Fralsaren, perhaps kin to the Swedish-Finnish poet Johan Ludvig Runeberg, 1804-1877
German spy in Borges story, also known as Hans Rabener
Kipling poem
Latin poem about the fabulous adventures of a young man named Ruodlieb, written c. 1030-1050 by a monk of Tegernsee
character in Tulio Herrera's novel Hágase hizo, also known as Alberto
semi-legendary Varangian warrior, founder of the princely dynasty of medieval Russia, d. 879
Phoenician settlement in northern Africa, in the area of the Spanish enclave Melilla in northern in Morocco
Russia. See also Unión Soviética
Work by Ramón Gómez de la Serna, 1913.
English critic and social theorist, 1819-1900, author of The Stones of Venice, Modern Painters, The Political Economy of Art and other works
street in Buenos Aires
British philosopher, mathematician, writer and social reformer, 1872-1970, author of Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy, The Analysis of Mind, Free Thought and Official Propaganda, Let the People Think and numerous other works
US stage and screen actress, 1907-1976
Wells travel book in the newly formed Soviet Union, 1920
character in the Persian epic poem Shah-nama who fights against his son Suhrab
Azorín book, 1905
Moabite widow in Bible
British physicist, 1871-1937
town in Dumfriesshire, Scotland, famous for the Ruthwell Cross, an Anglo-Saxon cross from the 8th century
character in Herbert Quain's The Secret Mirror
US historical figure, alleged fiancee of Abraham Lincoln, 1813?-1835, later the subject of a poem in Edgar Lee Masters' Spoon River Anthology
Jan van Ruysbroeck or Ruusbroec, Roman Catholic mystic, born in Brabant, 1293-1381, author of Seven Steps of the Ladder of Spiritual Love and The Spiritual Espousals
once known for its Moorish gardens build by Abd Allah al-Balansi in the ninth century, now part of the city of Valencia
character in Borges story
French orientalist (1580-1660 or 1672), known as the third Western translator of the Qu'ran.
Zen garden, Temple of the Dragon at Peace, in northwest Kyoto