In Jorge Luis Borges’s labyrinthine story “The Immortal,” the Roman tribune Marcus Flaminius Rufus drinks from a forbidden river and discovers that immortality is not a gift but a slow, terrible unraveling of the self. First published in Los Anales de Buenos Aires (1947) and later collected in The Aleph (1949), “The Immortal” stands as one of Borges’s most profound meditations on time, memory, and the nature of human identity. Through its nested narratives, ironic reversals, and philosophical paradoxes, Borges argues that mortality—not eternity—is the true source of meaning, individuality, and art.
This short story is the definitive text on Borges’ view of immortality. It serves as a mock-academic transcription of a Roman military tribune, Marcus Flaminius Rufus, who seeks the City of the Immortals. the immortal jorge luis borges pdf exclusive
Borges famously wrote that "paradise is a kind of library." An exclusive PDF of "The Immortal" is a single brick from that paradise. It allows you to carry Borges’ most dangerous idea—that immortality makes you less human, not more—in your pocket. This short story is the definitive text on
The story is presented as a "found manuscript" hidden within a six-volume set of Pope's translation of the The Protagonist It allows you to carry Borges’ most dangerous