Stanislav Szukalski wrote about a man in a parched desert who saw a submerged town while drinking from a waterhole. Upon seeing the town at the bottom of the waterhole, the man buried his face further to see more, almost forgetting to breathe due to being engrossed, and disliking having to return to the scorched and empty desert from the world he saw below the water's surface.
Stanislav Szukalski wrote about a man in a parched desert who saw a submerged town while drinking from a waterhole. Upon seeing the town at the bottom of the waterhole, the man buried his face further to see more, almost forgetting to breathe due to being engrossed, and disliking having to return to the scorched and empty desert from the world he saw below the water's surface.
Stanislav Szukalski wrote about a man in a parched desert who saw a submerged town while drinking from a waterhole. Upon seeing the town at the bottom of the waterhole, the man buried his face further to see more, almost forgetting to breathe due to being engrossed, and disliking having to return to the scorched and empty desert from the world he saw below the water's surface.
“Thirst brought him to this waterhole in the parched desert. While drinking the water he suddenly beheld a town on the bottom of this scoopful of water, burying his face in it to see more, almost forgetting to breathe, and hating to return to this world…this scorched, lifeless, friendless, empty desert.“ - Stanislav Szukalski MERCURYINTHEVEIN