Showing posts with label Impromptu In Moribundia Chapter II. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Impromptu In Moribundia Chapter II. Show all posts

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Something "Wrong"; Something "Right"








        It was, indeed, as though this, the very first of the strange scenes I was to witness in the land of Moribundia, had been specially prepared for me – so arranged that the members of the community were spread out before me, for my benefit, as it were, in a state of absolute naturalness and unself-consciousness, and so absorbed in their own rites that a stranger could move among them with less conspicuousness than a ghost.




 
        I knew at once that I must seize this moment – drink in these unspoiled impressions while I could and keeping close to the trees, I began to circle slowly, but without stealth in the direction of the pavilion.  




          It was not until I passed the second or third group of boys lying sprawled across the grass that I became aware that something was ‘wrong’ – had my first intimation, in other words, that this world  into which I had come had certain physical characteristics and peculiarities which differed, however faintly, from those in the world from which I had come.   There was, in fact, something ‘wrong’ about these boys  themselves.  And this something ‘wrong’ derived from the fact that there was something much too ‘right’ about them. 





Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Waking (In Moribundia)

 




Just as I have been asked by so many people what my feelings were when the door of the Asteradio was finally closed, and my journey lay ahead, so any number of others have wanted to know my first sensations on waking in Moribundia, and knowing that the farthest journey ever taken by man was at an end.  Did I know where I was?--did I know who I was?--did I remember what had happened to me?--was I afraid?--and so on and so forth.

        The answer is that I felt nothing more than the ordinary sensation of waking from sleeping--combined with the knowledge that I was rather cold, and that this in fact was what was waking me.  I remembered what had happened to me, who I was, and what I was doing, with the utmost clarity and incisiveness.  I was not afraid, but I wanted to do some more thinking before I opened my eyes and faced facts.