"The Secret Miracle" (Spanish: "El milagro secreto") is a short story by Argentine writer and poet Jorge Luis Borges. The story focuses on an author condemned to death. At the moment of his execution, time freezes, allowing him to finish his masterpiece, though only within his own mind.
The story was first published in the magazine Sur in February 1943 and was collected in Ficciones (1944). The first English translation (by Harriet de Onís) appeared in 1956 in Spanish Stories & Tales, Pocket Books.
Plot
editA minor Czech author, Jaromir Hladík,[1] is living in Prague when it is occupied by the Nazis in March 1939. Hladík is arrested and charged with being Jewish as well as opposing the Anschluss, and he is sentenced to die by firing squad in one week.
Terrified of his impending execution, Hladík spends most of that week picturing it with infinite variations, until he has "died hundreds of deaths".[2][3] However, Hladík's main concern soon turns to his unfinished play, The Enemies, the story of a nineteenth-century man caught in a strange, repeating loop of experiences. Hladík wishes to complete his play, which he feels will vindicate his previous mediocre literary output and life's work.
On the last night before his death, he prays to God, asking for one more year of time in which to finish the play. That night, he dreams of going to the Clementinum library, where the librarian has gone blind looking for a single letter that represents God. Someone returns an atlas to the library; Hladík touches a letter in it and hears a voice that says, "The time of your labor has been granted".[4][5]
The next morning, Hladík is taken outside to the firing squad. The sergeant gives the order to fire, but then time stops. Hladík cannot move, but he remains conscious. After an initial day of panic, he understands that God has answered his prayer, giving him an additional year of subjective time, though no one else will realize that anything unusual has happened – the "secret miracle" of the story's title.
Working from memory, Hladík mentally writes, expands, and edits his play, shaping every detail and nuance to his satisfaction. Finally, when he completes the final phrase to his satisfaction, time begins again, and the volley from the soldiers' rifles kills him.
Composition and themes
edit"The Secret Miracle" has often been compared to "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" (1890) by American author Ambrose Bierce, in which a Confederate spy hanged during the American Civil War hallucinates a lengthy escape at the moment of his death. However, it is unknown if Bierce's story was a specific influence on Borges' composition.[6][7]
In one of the story's best-known lines, Hladik reflects that "irreality" is "one of art's requisites".[8][9] The line is often cited in discussions of Borges' own explorations of art, artifice, and reality.[10]
Critic Edna Aizenberg has noted that though Borges is often considered an author who focuses on "irreality" rather than social concerns, "The Secret Miracle" is firmly rooted in the Holocaust; Hladík is arrested at the start of the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia and sentenced to death in large part for being Jewish.[10] John Fraser reads the story as similarly rooted in historical concerns, arguing that Hladik gives a model of how art can be used to transcend contemporary geopolitical horrors.[11]
Influence
editAmerican author Nicholson Baker cited "The Secret Miracle" as an influence on his erotic science fiction novel The Fermata.[12]
Along with another Borges story, "The Circular Ruins", "The Secret Miracle" was an influence on the Christopher Nolan science fiction film Inception, in which varying time perception inside and outside dreams plays a major plot role.[13]
References
edit- ^ The character's name was possibly inspired by the now forgotten Czech writer Václav Hladík (1868–1913).
Balderston, Daniel. Out of Context. Historical References and the Representation of Reality in Borges, Durham – London, Duke University Press, 1993, ISBN 0-8223-1316-2. (Spanish edition: Beatrix Viterbo Editora, 1996.)
See also essay Borges y Praga (2000, in Spanish) by František Vrhel (1943). - ^ Borges 1962, p. 89.
- ^ Spanish: "murió centenares de muertes"
- ^ Borges 1962, p. 92.
- ^ Spanish: "El tiempo de tu labor ha sido otorgado."
- ^ Alazraki, J. La prosa narrativa de Jorge Luis Borges. Estilo, Madrid, Gredos, 1983. pp. 352-356.
- ^ Lamy, Nicole (October 30, 2018). "Works of Fiction That Are Best Read Together". The New York Times. Retrieved August 11, 2023.
- ^ Borges 1962, p. 91.
- ^ Spanish: "la irrealidad, que es condición del arte"
- ^ a b Aizenberg, Edna. "Postmodern or Post-Auschwitz: Borges and the Limits of Representation." Variaciones Borges, no. 3, 1997, pp. 141–52. JSTOR. Accessed 11 Aug. 2023.
- ^ Fraser, John. "Jorge Luis Borges, Alive in His Labyrinth." Criticism, vol. 31, no. 2, 1989, pp. 179–91. JSTOR. Accessed 11 Aug. 2023.
- ^ Slung, Michelle (February 13, 1994). "Magic Voyeurism". The New York Times. Retrieved August 11, 2023.
- ^ Ouellette, Jennifer (2020-09-07). "Can't watch Tenet? Now is the perfect time to revisit Inception". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2020-09-07.
Bibliography
edit- Borges, Jorge Luis (1962). Labyrinths: Selected Stories & Other Writings. Translated by Onis, Harriet. New York: New Directions.