cukursēne ([info]saccharomyces) wrote on July 1st, 2015 at 08:08 pm
He knew now why this tranquil life in sea and sunlight on the rafts seemed to him like an after-life or a dream, unreal. It was because he knew in his heart that reality was empty: without life or warmth or color or sound: without meaning. There were no heights or depths. All this lovely play of form and light and color on the sea and in the eyes of men, was no more than that: a playing of illusions on the shallow void. They passed, and there remained the shapelessness and the cold. Nothing else.

// Ursula K. Le Guin, 1972, The Farthest Shore
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