Janus appears in the poems, The Self and the Other, The Gold of the Tigers and The Maker. He is the two-headed, Roman god of doorways, beginnings, and endings. His faces could see into the past and the future. Borges uses Janus as a symbol of the duality of nature and man, and of the past and future. He likes that Janus' two faces look away from each other.
Selected Poems