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176 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1986
But if a person doesn't think about somebody any more, surely he forgets him, I say.
[...] but few would notice the loss, so that one had to wonder if it was a loss at all.
When one has not spoken at all for so long, despite a great compulsion to speak, says Herr Veilchenfeld, one would most like to use one's nails to scratch off oneself everything which has thus developed and matured in the course of time and fling it into one long sentence and wrap it around the unsuspecting audience. Hence, around you, he says.
Do you know the feeling of losing yourself? Herr Veilchenfeld asks Father. Do you also lose yourself sometimes?
Without a doubt, Father says, stroking his beard.
In the landscape or in your thoughts?
In both, now and then, says Father.
Indeed, says Herr Veilchenfeld. The strength needed even just to cross the street, the strength to keep to something.
There is nothing that I could draw, it's all not worth it. There's no need to hold onto the world as it is, there's no point in that.