Seven Nights (Revised Edition) (New Directions Paperbook)

by Jorge Luis Borges

Other authorsEliot Weinberger (Translator), Alastair Reid (Introduction)
Paperback, 2009

Status

Available

Call number

808

Publication

New Directions (2009), Edition: Revised Edition, Paperback, 128 pages

Description

The incomparable Borges delivered these seven lectures in Buenos Aires in 1977; attendees were treated to Borges' erudition on the following topics: Dante'sThe Divine Comedy,Nightmares,Thousand and One Dreams,Buddhism,Poetry,The Kabbalah, andBlindness.

User reviews

LibraryThing member Banoo
This was good. It's seven lectures that Borges gave in seven nights in Buenos Aires in 1977 (that's a lot of sevens). But it felt more like it was me an Borges sitting in a small room across from each other. He started talking to me about The Divine Comedy: Inferno; Purgatorio; Paradiso and urged
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me to shed my fears and read the book. He said I would greatly be enriched. So I told him ok, I will. I was a still a bit intimidated by his presence and at that point would have stuck my hand in boiling water if he told me to. Then he started talking about nightmares and I started to loosen up a bit. This guy had some pretty crazy nightmares and it turns out that one of his friends and me shared a certain kind of nightmare... dreams that try to encompass infinity. I wanted to ask questions but he continued on by talking about the book Tales from a Thousand and One Nights and my mouth just hung open. He said he had the complete volumes but would never get to read all of them. Just knowing they were there gave him comfort. And then he went on to Buddhism and my world started spinning. He made me question too many of my foundations... I wanted to scream but he was relentless never giving me a chance to take a breath. This topic more than any he shared with me that night haunted me. Luckily he switched over to the topic of Poetry and I started to relax a little. And then it was on to the Kabbalah and I had to stifle a yawn. It was getting late. I was tired. And I couldn't get Madonna's vision out of my head. But when he told me he was going to wrap up this little talk by discussing Blindness, I perked up. I sat there looking at this old kindly man. I was probably just a greenish or bluish blob in his eyes but I'm sure he noticed that this blob didn't move. He spoke of blindness as being a gift. He said it taught him so much. He ended our time together with a line of Goethe: Alles Nahe werde fern (everything near becomes distant). 'Goethe', he said, 'was referring to the evening twilight. Everything near becomes distant. It is true. At nightfall, the things closest to us seem to move away from our eyes. So the visible world has moved away from my eyes, perhaps forever.'

An excellent book.
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LibraryThing member horaciocorral
Borges as Coleridge loved to talk. Many times met at Bioy Casares home with other writers and intellectuals and to share - and listen - many ideas and stories. This love for the spoken word appears in his lectures as is shown in this book.

In seven nights, he addresses an audience with something
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more personal than what may appear - as Coleridge did - poetry, Dante's Divine Comedy, metaphors, Arabian nights, are some of the themes that he appreciated most of his life and of he spoke on those nights.

For any Borges reader or any person which desires to understand what is poetry or to have a glimpse of the mind of one of the best writers of the twentieth century, this is an excellent work.
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LibraryThing member SheWoreRedShoes
When a learned person composes and gives a lecture, the audience understands here before us stands a learned person. Whether this is enjoyable or not, we generally know when someone learned speaks.

When a devoted reader composes and gives a lecture, the audience senses the passion for reading, for
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language, for books, and is buoyed by the sensations. Our minds fondly drift toward favorites we wish to read again.

When someone practiced in the art of conversation speaks, the play in language, with language, is marked by a pronounced generosity perhaps unique to conversation. We know this generosity even if we cannot plot it nor capture it photographically, nor record the limits of it in a brief exposition. For the one who converses well differs greatly from the one who communicates well. Would that we knew more conversationalists than communicators.

And when a learned reader practiced in the arts of language converses with you for seven nights, well, what pleasure. Even more so, if you have spent those seven nights with Borges.
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LibraryThing member jonfaith
Emerson said that a library is a magic chamber in which there are many enchanted spirits. They wake when we call them. When the book lies unopened, it is literally, geometrically, a volume, a thing among things. When we open it, when the book surrenders itself to its reader, the aesthetic event
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occurs. And even for the same reader the same book changes, for the change; we are the river of Heraclitus, who said that the man of yesterday is not the man of today, who will not be the man of tomorrow. We change incessantly, and each reading of a book, each rereading, each memory of that rereading, reinvents the text.

This is a series of seven lectures Borges delivered in the late 70s, relying on his capacious memory as his eyesight had departed by this time. The final lecture on Blindness explores this dynamic, citing Oscar Wilde's assertion that Homer had to be mythologized as a blind poet to present poetry as an aural art.

There are sidelong digressions on The Arabian Nights, on Dante. Etymology is explored. It is a telling endorsement of Borges that I was transfixed by his pontificating on Buddhism, a subject I can't imagine contemplating otherwise. The Maestro recognizes human failing without wasting time to illustrate such. His remark that being blind afforded him the opportunity to explore medieval literature, especially Old English and the Scandinavian Ruins. This revelation is most profound.
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Language

Original publication date

1980

Physical description

128 p.; 7.98 inches

ISBN

0811218384 / 9780811218382
Page: 0.1932 seconds