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    Chapter 8 - Page 2

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    death, the smashing to bits of the form he hated! Let him be food for
    fishes, this dog Siddhartha, this lunatic, this depraved and rotten
    body, this weakened and abused soul! Let him be food for fishes and
    crocodiles, let him be chopped to bits by the daemons!

    With a distorted face, he stared into the water, saw the reflection of
    his face and spit at it. In deep tiredness, he took his arm away from
    the trunk of the tree and turned a bit, in order to let himself fall
    straight down, in order to finally drown. With his eyes closed, he
    slipped towards death.

    Then, out of remote areas of his soul, out of past times of his now
    weary life, a sound stirred up. It was a word, a syllable, which he,
    without thinking, with a slurred voice, spoke to himself, the old word
    which is the beginning and the end of all prayers of the Brahmans, the
    holy "Om", which roughly means "that what is perfect" or "the
    completion". And in the moment when the sound of "Om" touched
    Siddhartha's ear, his dormant spirit suddenly woke up and realized the
    foolishness of his actions.

    Siddhartha was deeply shocked. So this was how things were with him,
    so doomed was he, so much he had lost his way and was forsaken by all
    knowledge, that he had been able to seek death, that this wish, this
    wish of a child, had been ale to grow in him: to find rest by
    annihilating his body! What all agony of these recent times, all
    sobering realizations, all desperation had not brought about, this was
    brought on by this moment, when the Om entered his consciousness: he
    became aware of himself in his misery and in his error.

    Om! he spoke to himself: Om! and again he knew about Brahman, knew
    about the indestructibility of life, knew about all that is divine,
    which he had forgotten.

    But this was only a moment, flash. By the foot of the coconut-tree,
    Siddhartha collapsed, struck down by tiredness, mumbling Om, placed his
    head on the root of the tree and fell into a deep sleep.

    Deep was his sleep and without dreams, for a long time he had not known
    such a sleep any more. When he woke up after many hours, he felt as if

    ten years had passed, he heard the water quietly flowing, did not know
    where he was and who had brought him here, opened his eyes, saw with
    astonishment that there were trees and the sky above him, and he
    remembered where he was and how he got here. But it took him a long
    while for this, and the past seemed to him as if it had been covered by
    a veil, infinitely distant, infinitely far away, infinitely meaningless.
    He only knew that his previous life (in the first moment when he thought
    about it, this past life seemed to him like a very old, previous
    incarnation, like an early pre-birth of his present self)--that his
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