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#necronomicon
It’s just a book. Nothing more. A combination of translated words, written upon tan paper and bound in black leather. It’s just a book, and yet somehow it infects the minds of the readers, twisting them until there is nothing left inside their skulls, nothing but its insidious whisperings. “The Book of Dead Names” is the title’s translation, as if to say those whose times are recorded within are among us no more. Or perhaps the author, so distraught by what he had learned, sealed their existence away in the shrine of forgetfulness so that no others would suffer like him. Just a book. Just words. Harmless, comforting letters, arranged into patterns. Yet, using only these written words, the mad Arab has conveyed our smallness in the immensity of this our universe, our insignificance alongside the insatiable hunger of the stars. He paid dearly for his prehension, crumbling away like an ancient ruin before the endless, shifting desert that is the merciless chaos. He is gone. But his lexicon remains. Just a book. But such knowledge is not meant for the fragile, breakable forms of our species. To understand our place in the universe, and the immeasurable horrors from which aegis of Ignorance shields us, is to let go of the handholds of sanity and drift silently off into the void of enlightenment. Yet still the book is read. Still humanity turns its gaze to the stars, and deep beneath the earth, searching for confirmation of what we already know, though our psyche may forbid us to conceive of it. Knowledge is not power. It is not freeing. It is death. Death and ruin to all who grasp the truth of this dark world. It’s just a book. A book penned by a man insane. Rows of indecipherable words upon innumerable pages, worn away by time.
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Dec 19, 2018
Dec 19, 2018 at 12:38 PM UTC
The Necronomicon
It’s just a book. Nothing more. A combination of translated words, written upon tan paper and bound in black leather. It’s just a book, and yet somehow it infects the minds of the readers, twisting them until there is nothing left inside their skulls, nothing but its insidious whisperings. “The Book of Dead Names” is the title’s translation, as if to say those whose times are recorded within are among us no more. Or perhaps the author, so distraught by what he had learned, sealed their existence away in the shrine of forgetfulness so that no others would suffer like him. Just a book. Just words. Harmless, comforting letters, arranged into patterns. Yet, using only these written words, the mad Arab has conveyed our smallness in the immensity of this our universe, our insignificance alongside the insatiable hunger of the stars. He paid dearly for his prehension, crumbling away like an ancient ruin before the endless, shifting desert that is the merciless chaos. He is gone. But his lexicon remains. Just a book. But such knowledge is not meant for the fragile, breakable forms of our species. To understand our place in the universe, and the immeasurable horrors from which aegis of Ignorance shields us, is to let go of the handholds of sanity and drift silently off into the void of enlightenment. Yet still the book is read. Still humanity turns its gaze to the stars, and deep beneath the earth, searching for confirmation of what we already know, though our psyche may forbid us to conceive of it. Knowledge is not power. It is not freeing. It is death. Death and ruin to all who grasp the truth of this dark world. It’s just a book. A book penned by a man insane. Rows of indecipherable words upon innumerable pages, worn away by time.
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