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Dreamtigers (Borges) (Prose Poem) by Sasha
In my childhood I came to fervently worship the tiger: not the yellow
tigers of the Panará River and Amazonian tangles, but the striped,
asiatic, royal tiger which only armed men can confront from a fort on
the back of an elephant. I would forever hang around in front of one of
the cages of the zoo; I would prize the huge encyclopedias and natural
history books for the majesty of their tigers. (I still remember those
illustrations; I who cannot rightly recall a womanâs face or smile.)
Childhood passed, the tigers and my passion for them faded, but they are
still there in my dreams. In the subconcious or chaotic dimension they
persist, and in the following way: While asleep, some dream disturbs me
and I know at once it is a dream. Then Iâll think: This is a dream, a
pure diversion of my will, and now that my power is unlimited I am going
to cause a tiger.
Oh incompetence! Never can my dreams engender the craved and desired
creature. A tiger appears indeed, but dissected or enfeebled, or with
imperfect variations of form, or of an unacceptable size, or ephemeral,
or in the semblance of the bird or of the dog.
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