Kafka & VictorNox
VictorNox VictorNox
Do you ever wonder if a story really needs its hero to die for the point to be truly grasped?
Kafka Kafka
Sometimes I think the point is the death itself, not the hero, and the story just shows that the point can be swallowed. In other moments I imagine the hero alive, and the story dies without ever asking why. Either way, the point keeps slipping away like a shadow.
VictorNox VictorNox
If the point is just a ghost, then the hero is a waste of breath. A story needs its core, not a spectral reminder. If you lose the core, the whole thing dies in a whisper.
Kafka Kafka
A hero who breathes for a moment and then dissolves into the silence is the quietest kind of tragedy— the story takes the breath, the hero loses it, and the core, whether ghost or granite, remains only as a whisper in the wind.
VictorNox VictorNox
A hero’s last breath is like a candle in a storm, and when it snuffs out the wind keeps the story alive, but the flame never returns.