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es una esfera cuyo centro cabal es cualquier hexagono, cuya circunferencia es inaccesible
18

Library of Babel: Publication 1

Mar 20, 2016

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  • La Biblioteca es una esfera cuyo centro cabal es cualquier hexagono,

    cuya circunferencia es inaccesible

  • TH Eu n v E R Se

    is

    posedcomofHEXAGONAL

    GALLLERIES.MIRRORin THE VestibulE there is a

  • Lik

    e a

    ll t

    he m

    en o

    f t

    he L

    ibrary, in

    my

    younger d

    ays I

    tr

    av

    el

    ed

    . I h

    ave j

    ou

    rn

    ey

    ed

    in q

    uest o

    f a

    book, p

    erhaps t

    he c

    atalog

    of c

    atalogs

    .

    Now t

    hat m

    y e

    yes c

    an

    hardly

    make o

    ut

    what

    I myself have

    writ

    ten, I

    am p

    reparin

    g t

    o d

    ie, a

    few l

    eagues f

    rom t

    he

    where I

    was b

    orn. W

    hen I

    am d

    ead,

    compassio

    nate h

    ands w

    ill t

    hrow m

    e o

    ver t

    he r

    ail

    ing. m

    y t

    omb w

    ill b

    e t

    he u

    nfathomable a

    ir, m

    y b

    ody w

    ill s

    ink

    for a

    ges, a

    nd w

    ill d

    ecay a

    nd d

    issolve in

    the w

    ind

    engendered b

    y m

    y f

    all, w

    hic

    h s

    hall b

    e i

    nf

    in

    it

    e. I

    declare t

    hat t

    he L

    ibrary is

    endless.......... I

    dealis

    ts a

    rgue t

    hat t

    he h

    exagonal r

    ooms

    are t

    he

    necessary s

    hape o

    f a

    bsolute s

    pace, o

    r a

    t l

    east o

    f o

    ur p

    erceptio

    n o

    f s

    pace. T

    hey a

    rgue t

    hat a

    or c

    hamber is

    inconceiv

    able. (M

    ystic

    s c

    laim

    that t

    heir

    ecstasie

    s r

    eveal t

    o t

    hem a

    chamber c

    ontain

    ing a

    n e

    normous c

    ircular b

    ook w

    ith a

    contin

    uous s

    pin

    e t

    hat g

    oes c

    ompletely a

    round t

    he w

    alls. B

    ut t

    heir

    testim

    ony is

    suspect, t

    heir

    words o

    bscure. T

    hat c

    yclic

    al b

    ook is

    God.) L

    et it

    suffic

    e f

    or t

    he m

    oment t

    hat I

    repeat t

    he c

    lassic

    dic

    tum:

    The li brary is a sphere whose exact centre is Any hexagon and whose cir-cumference is unattainable.

  • Each wall of

    each hexagon is

    furnished with five bookshelves; eachbookshelf holds

    thirty-two books identical in format;

    each book contains lbur hundred ten

    pages; each page, forty lines; each

    line, approximately

    eighty black letters. There are also letters on the

    front cover of each book; those letters

    neither indicate nor prefigure what

    the pages inside will say. I am aware

    that that lack of correspondence

    once struck men as mysterious.

    the Libr- arY

  • IN ORDER TO GRASP THE DISTANCE THAT S E P A R A T E S THE HUMAN AND THE DIVINE, ONE HAS ONLY TO COMPARE THESE CRUDETREMBLING symbols which MY FALLIBLE HAND scrawls ON THE COVER OF A BOOK WITH THE ORGANIC LETTERS INSIDE NEAT, delicate, DEEP BLACK,

    AND INIMITABLY SYMMETRICAL SYMMETRICAL

    B A B E L.The Library has existed ab eternitate. That truth, whose immedi-ate coro llry is the future eternity of the world, no ra-tional mind can doubt

    MAN, THE IMPER

    FECT LIBRAR

    IAN, MAY BE THE W

    ORK OF CHANC

    E OR OF

    MALEVOLENT

    DEMIURGES TH

    E

    UNIVERSE, WITH ITS ELEGANT A

    PPOINTMENTS

    ITS

    BOOKSHELVE

    S, ITS ENIGMA

    TIC BOOKS, IT

    S INDEFATIGAB

    LE

    S T

    A

    I

    R

    CASES

    FOR THE

    TRAVELLER, A

    ND ITS WATER

    CLOSETS FOR

    THE SEATED L

    IBRARIAN CAN

    ONLY BE THE

    HANDIWORK OF

    A

    GOD.

  • THE ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPT HAS

    NEITHER NUMB3RS NOR capital LETTERS;

    PUNCTUATION IS LIMITED TO THE ,

    AND THE . .THOSE TWO MARKS, THE ,

    AND THE TWENTY TWO LETTERS OF

    THE ARE THE TWENTY FIVE SUFFICIENT SYMBOLS THAT OUR UNKNOWN

    AUTHOR IS REFERRING TO.

    THERE ARE TWENTY FIVE RTH GRAPHIC SYMB LS.

    abcdefghijklM nopqrstuvwxyz

  • V A L U ET H E O F

    M C V O N P A G E 71 L I N E 3 I S N OT T H E S A M E O F T H E S A M E S

    E R I E S O N A N

    O T H E R L I N E

  • The library is total, perfect, complete and whole.

    i d e n T I c a lTHERe

    IdeNTiCALtwo

    are NOtwo

    books

    there ARE no there ARE no BOOKSTHERE ARE NO TWO / i d e n t i c a l b o o k s /

    thERE are no TWO idENtical books

    there are no tht h e r e a r e n o t w o i d e n t i c a l b o o k sidentical books

  • PROBLEMPROBLEM

    was NO PERSONAL

    NO WORLD

    eth re

    the universe was justified.

  • words.

    S e a r c h -

    i n g

    f o r

    d isgracefuld i s honourableor

  • DlSproportionateD E

    p r e s sl O ND E

    p r e s sl O N

    P R E S S

    these precious books were forever out of r e a c h

  • They would invade the tials that were not al ly through a volume, books. It is to their hy lay the senseless lo ss of millions of volumes.

    gienic ascetic rage, that WE and condemn entire walls OF

    ways false, leaf disgustED-

    h e x a g o N S , show creDEN

    B00SSEL .SKETANELIMIWORTH

  • We also have knowledge of

    another superstition from that

    period: belief in what was term

    ed the Book-Man.

    Many have gone in search

    of Him. For a hundred years,

    men beat every possible

    path and every path in vain.

    If the honor and wisdom and

    joy of such a reading are not to be m

    y own, then let them

    be for others.

    Let heaven exist though my

    own place be in hell. Let me

    be tortured and battered and annihilated, but let there be one instant, one creature, wherein thy enorm

    ous library m

    ay find its justification.

    POSSIBLEPOSSIBLE

    POIB LE

  • R EA D MEYouWho

    CERTAIN

    AreYou

    U DE N RSTAND OU Y

    MY

    U ELANG AG ??

  • met

    hodi

    cal

    com

    posit

    ion.

    The certainty that everything has already been written annuls us, or renders us phantasnal. I know districts in which the young people prostrate themselves before books and like savages kiss their pages, though they cannot read a letter. Epidemics, heretical discords, pilgrimages that inevitably

    degenerate into brigandage have decimated the population. I believe I mentioned the suicides, which are more and more frcquent every year. I am perhaps misled by old age and fear, but I suspect that the

    human species the only species teeters at the verge of extinction, yet that the Library, enlightened, solitary, infinite, perfectly unmoving, armed with precious volumes, pointless, incorruptible, and secret,

    will endure.

    dis-tracts fro the pres-ent co di-tion hu anty

    DISTRACTSMEFROMTHE PRESENTCONDITION OFHUMANITY

    DIS-TRACTS ME FROM THE PRES-ENT CONDI-TION OF HUMANI-TY

  • THE LI-BRARY IS

    UNLIMIT-EDBUT PERIOD-

    it is not illogical

    to think the world is

    infinite

    and yet those who

    picture the world as

    unlimited forget that

    the number of possible

    books is not

    the vast library is

    pointless

    IC.

  • THE LI-BRARY IS

    UNLIMIT-EDBUT PERIOD-

    it is not illogical

    to think the world is

    infinite

    and yet those who

    picture the world as

    unlimited forget that

    the number of possible

    books is not

    the vast library is

    pointless

    IC.

  • La Biblioteca es una esfera cuyo centro cabal es cualquier hexagono,

    cuya circunferencia es inaccesible