Jorge Luis Borges - The Secret Miracle
And God made him die during the course of a hundred
years and then He revived him and said:
"How long have you been here?"
"A day, or part of a day," he replied.
- The Koran, II 261
On the night of March 14, 1939, in an apartment on
the Zelternergasse in Prague, Jaromir Hladik, author of the unfinished tragedy
The Enemies, of a Vindication of Eternity, and of an inquiry into the indirect
Jewish sources of Jakob Boehme, dreamt a long drawn out chess game. The
antagonists were not two individuals, but two illustrious families. The contest
had begun many centuries before. No one could any longer describe the forgotten
prize, but it was rumored that it was enormous and perhaps infinite. The pieces
and the chessboard were set up in a secret tower. Jaromir (in his dream) was the
first-born of one of the contending families. The hour for the next move, which
could not be postponed, struck on all the clocks. The dreamer ran across the
sands of a rainy desert - and he could not remember the chessmen or the rules of
chess. At this point he awoke. The din of the rain and the clangor of the
terrible clocks ceased. A measured unison, sundered by voices of command, arose
from the Zelternergasse. Day had dawned, and the armored vanguards of the Third
Reich were entering Prague.
On the 19th, the authorities received an accusation
against Jaromir Hladik; on the same day, at dusk, he was arrested. He was taken
to a barracks, aseptic and white, on the opposite bank of the Moldau. He was
unable to refute a single one of the charges made by the Gestapo: his maternal
surname was Jaroslavski, his blood was Jewish, his study of Boehme was
Judaizing, his signature had helped to swell the final census of those
protesting the Anschluss. In 1928, he had translated the Sepher Yezirah for the
publishing house of Hermann Barsdorf; the effusive catalogue issued by this firm
had exaggerated, for commercial reasons, the translator's renown; this catalogue
was leafed through by Julius Rothe, one of the officials in whose hands lay
Hladik's fate. The man does not exist who, outside his own specialty, is not
credulous: two or three adjectives in Gothic script sufficed to convince Julius
Rothe of Hladik's pre-eminence, and of the need for the death penalty, pour
encourager les autres. The execution was set for the 29th of March, at nine in
the morning. This delay (whose importance the reader will appreciate later) was
due to a desire on the part of the authorities to act slowly and impersonally,
in the manner of planets or vegetables.
Hladik's first reaction was simply one of horror.
He was sure he would not have been terrified by the gallows, the block, or the
knife; but to die before a firing squad was unbearable. In vain he repeated to
himself that the pure and general act of dying, not the concrete circumstances,
was the dreadful fact. He did not grow weary of imagining these circumstances:
he absurdly tried to exhaust all the variations. He infinitely anticipated the
process, from the sleepless dawn to the mysterious discharge of the rifles.
Before the day set by Julius Rothe, he died hundreds of deaths, in courtyards
whose shapes and angles defied geometry, shot down by changeable soldiers whose
number varied and who sometimes put an end to him from close up and sometimes
from far away. He faced these imaginary executions with true terror (perhaps
with true courage). Each simulacrum lasted a few seconds. Once the circle was
closed, Jaromir returned interminably to the tremulous eve of his death. Then he
would reflect that reality does not tend to coincide with forecasts about it.
With perverse logic he inferred that to foresee a circumstantial detail is to
prevent its happening. Faithful to this feeble magic, he would invent, so that
they might not happen, the most atrocious particulars. Naturally, he finished by
fearing that these particulars were prophetic. During his wretched nights he
strove to hold fast somehow to the fugitive substance of time. He knew that time
was precipitating itself toward the dawn of the 29th. He reasoned aloud: I am
now in the night of the 22nd. While this night lasts (and for six more nights to
come) I am invulnerable, immortal. His nights of sleep seemed to him deep dark
pools into which he might submerge. Sometimes he yearned impatiently for the
firing squad's definitive volley, which would redeem him, for better or for
worse, from the vain compulsion of his imagination. On the 28th, as the final
sunset reverberated across the high barred windows, he was distracted from all
these abject considerations by thought of his drama, The Enemies.
Hladik was past forty. Apart from a few friendships
and many habits, the problematic practice of literature constituted his life.
Like every writer, he measured the virtues of other writers by their
performance, and asked that they measure him by what he conjectured or planned.
All of the books he had published merely moved him to a complex repentance. His
investigation of the work of Boehme, of Ibn Ezra, and of Fludd was essentially a
product of mere application; his translation of the Sepher Yezirah was
characterized by negligence, fatigue, and conjecture. He judged his Vindication
of Eternity to be perhaps less deficient: the first volume is a history of the
diverse eternities devised by man, from the immutable Being of Parmenides to the
alterable past of Hinton; the second volume denies (with Francis Bradley) that
all the events in the universe make up a temporal series. He argues that the
number of experiences possible to man is not infinite, and that a single
"repetition" suffices to demonstrate that time is a fallacy . . . Unfortunately,
the arguments that demonstrate this fallacy are not any less fallacious. Hladik
was in the habit of running through these arguments with a certain disdainful
perplexity. He had also written a series of expressionist poems; these, to the
discomfiture of the author, were included in an anthology in 1924, and there was
no anthology of later date which did not inherit them. Hladik was anxious to
redeem himself from his equivocal and languid past with his verse drama, The
Enemies. (He favored the verse form in the theater because it prevents the
spectators from forgetting unreality, which is the necessary condition of
art.)
This opus preserved the dramatic unities (time,
place, and action). It transpires in Hradcany, in the library of the Baron
Roemerstadt, on one of the last evenings of the nineteenth century. In the first
scene of the first act, a stranger pays a visit to Roemerstadt. (A clock strikes
seven, the vehemence of a setting sun glorifies the window panes, the air
transmits familiar and impassioned Hungarian music.) This visit is followed by
others; Roemerstadt does not know the people who come to importune him, but he
has the uncomfortable impression that he has seen them before: perhaps in a
dream. All the visitors fawn upon him, but it is obvious - first to the
spectators of the drama, and then to the Baron himself - that they are secret
enemies, sworn to ruin him. Roemerstadt manages to outwit, or evade, their
complex intrigues. In the course of the dialogue, mention is made of his
betrothed, Julia de Weidenau, and of a certain Jaroslav Kubin, who at one time
had been her suitor. Kubin has now lost his mind and thinks he is Roemerstadt .
. . The dangers multiply. Roemerstadt, at the end of the second act, is forced
to kill one of the conspirators. The third and final act begins. The
incongruities gradually mount up: actors who seemed to have been discarded from
the play reappear; the man who had been killed by Roemerstadt returns, for an
instant. Someone notes that the time of day has not advanced: the clock strikes
seven, the western sun reverberates in the high window panes, impassioned
Hungarian music is carried on the air. The first speaker in the play reappears
and repeats the words he had spoken in the first scene of the first act.
Roemerstadt addresses him without the least surprise. The spectator understands
that Roemerstadt is the wretched Jaroslav gubin. The drama has never taken
place: it is the circular delirium which Kubin unendingly lives and
relives.
Hladik had never asked himself whether this
tragicomedy of errors was preposterous or admirable, deliberate or casual. Such
a plot, he intuited, was the most appropriate invention to conceal his defects
and to manifest his strong points, and it embodied the possibility of redeeming
(symbolically) the fundamental meaning of his life. He had already completed the
first act and a scene or two of the third. The metrical nature of the work
allowed him to go over it continually, rectifying the hexameters, without
recourse to the manuscript. He thought of the two acts still to do, and of his
coming death. In the darkness, he addressed himself to God. If I exist at all,
if I am not one of Your repetitions and errata, I exist as the author of The
Enemies. In order to bring this drama, which may serve to justify me, to justify
You, I need one more year. Grant me that year, You to whom belong the centuries
and all time. It was the last, the most atrocious night, but ten minutes later
sleep swept over him like a dark ocean and drowned him.
Toward dawn, he dreamt he had hidden himself in one
of the naves of the Clementine Library. A librarian wearing dark glasses asked
him: What are you looking for? Hladik answered: God. The Librarian told him: God
is in one of the letters on one of the pages of one of the 400,000 volumes of
the Clementine. My fathers and the fathers of my fathers have sought after that
letter. I've gone blind looking for it. He removed his glasses, and Hladik saw
that his eyes were dead. A reader came in to return an atlas. This atlas is
useless, he said, and handed it to Hladik, who opened it at random. As if
through a haze, he saw a map of India. With a sudden rush of assurance, he
touched one of the tiniest letters. An ubiquitous voice said: The time for your
work has been granted. Hladik awoke.
He remembered that the dreams of men belong to God,
and that Maimonides wrote that the words of a dream are divine, when they are
all separate and clear and are spoken by someone invisible. He dressed. Two
soldiers entered his cell and ordered him to follow them.
From behind the door, Hladik had visualized a
labyrinth of passageways, stairs, and connecting blocks. Reality was less
rewarding: the party descended to an inner courtyard by a single iron stairway.
Some soldiers - uniforms unbuttoned - were testing a motorcycle and disputing
their conclusions. The sergeant looked at his watch: it was 8:44. They must wait
until nine. Hladik, more insignificant than pitiful, sat down on a pile of
firewood. He noticed that the soldiers' eyes avoided his. To make his wait
easier, the sergeant offered him a cigarette. Hladik did not smoke. He accepted
the cigarette out of politeness or humility. As he lit it, he saw that his hands
shook. The day was clouding over. The soldiers spoke in low tones, as though he
were already dead. Vainly, he strove to recall the woman of whom Julia de
Weidenau was the symbol . . .
The firing squad fell in and was brought to
attention. Hladik, standing against the barracks wall, waited for the volley.
Someone expressed fear the wall would be splashed with blood. The condemned man
was ordered to step forward a few paces. Hladik recalled, absurdly, the
preliminary maneuvers of a photographer. A heavy drop of rain grazed one of
Hladik's temples and slowly rolled down his cheek. The sergeant barked the final
command.
The physical universe stood still.
The rifles converged upon Hladik, but the men
assigned to pull the triggers were immobile. The sergeant's arm eternalized an
inconclusive gesture. Upon a courtyard flag stone a bee cast a stationary
shadow. The wind had halted, as in a painted picture. Hladik began a shriek, a
syllable, a twist of the hand. He realized he was paralyzed. Not a sound reached
him from the stricken world.
He thought: I'm in hell, I'm dead.
He thought: I've gone mad.
He thought: Time has come to a halt.
Then he reflected that in that case, his thought,
too, would have come to a halt. He was anxious to test this possibility: he
repeated (without moving his lips) the mysterious Fourth Eclogue of Virgil. He
imagined that the already remote soldiers shared his anxiety; he longed to
communicate with them. He was astonished that he felt no fatigue, no vertigo
from his protracted immobility. After an indeterminate length of time he fell
asleep. On awaking he found the world still motionless and numb. The drop of
water still clung to his cheek; the shadow of the bee still did not shift in the
courtyard; the smoke from the cigarette he had thrown down did not blow away.
Another "day" passed before Hladik understood.
He had asked God for an entire year in which to
finish his work: His omnipotence had granted him the time. For his sake, God
projected a secret miracle: German lead would kill him, at the determined hour,
but in his mind a year would elapse between the command to fire and its
execution. From perplexity he passed to stupor, from stupor to resignation, from
resignation to sudden gratitude.
He disposed of no document but his own memory; the
mastering of each hexameter as he added it, had imposed upon him a kind of
fortunate discipline not imagined by those amateurs who forget their vague,
ephemeral, paragraphs. He did not work for posterity, nor even for God, of whose
literary preferences he possessed scant knowledge. Meticulous, unmoving,
secretive, he wove his lofty invisible labyrinth in time. He worked the third
act over twice. He eliminated some rather too-obvious symbols: the repeated
striking of the hour, the music. There were no circumstances to constrain him.
He omitted, condensed, amplified; occasionally, he chose the primitive version.
He grew to love the courtyard, the barracks; one of the faces endlessly
confronting him made him modify his conception of Roemerstadt's character. He
discovered that the hard cacaphonies which so distressed Flaubert are mere
visual superstitions: debilities and annoyances of the written word, not of the
sonorous, the sounding one . . . He brought his drama to a conclusion: he lacked
only a single epithet. He found it: the drop of water slid down his cheek. He
began a wild cry, moved his face aside. A quadruple blast brought him
down.
Jaromir Hladik died on March 29, at 9:02 in the
morning.