“Once again he could hear the planet’s joints and lifeblood. Stirrings in the stone. Ancient events. Here, time was like water. The tiniest creatures were his fathers and mothers. The fossils were his children. It made him into remembrance itself. He let his bare palms ricochet upon the walls, drawing in the heat and the cold, the sharp and the smooth. Plunging, galloping, he pawed at the flesh of God. This magnificent rock. This fortress of their being. This was the Word. Earth. Moment by moment, step by step, he felt himself becoming prehistoric. It was a blessed release from human habits. In this vast, capillaried monastery, through these openings and fretted spillways and yawning chthonic fistulae, drinking from pools of water older than mammal life altogether, memory was simply memory. It was not something to be marked on calendars or stored in books or labeled in graphs or drawn on maps. You did not memorize memory any more than you memorized existence. He remembered his way deeper by the taste of the soil and by the drag of air currents that had no cardinal direction. He left behind the cartography of the Holy Land and its entry caves through Jebel el Lawz in the elusive Midian. He forgot the name of the Indian Ocean as he passed beneath it. He felt gold, soft and serpentine, standing from the walls, but no longer recognized it as gold. Time passed, but he gave up counting it. Days? Weeks? He lost his memory even as he gained it.”
Quote by Jeff Long
Book:The Descent
Work
The Descent
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
“The surface world may be as much a myth to the subterraneans as the underworld is to us.”
Source: Testament of the Hollow
Source: Big Sky
Source: Bengalo Moon: Jook and Gypsies Vol. 2
Source: البيان والتبيين
“Something must be done, however. I will not have space ships landing on my lawn.”
Source: The Sundial
Source: Another Whole Nother Story
Source: Rubicon
Source: Relativity
Source: Relativity
