Parallel Realities

written by Alan Kostrenčić

 

The Tao proceedeth by its own nature, doing nothing;
therefore there is no doing which it comprehendeth not.
If kings and princes were to govern in this manner,
all things would operate aright by their own motion.

Lao-Tzu: Tao Te Ching[1]

 

 Every repeated visit to Venice would but deepen my sense of its unreality. The city’s silhouette in the lagoon mist together with trans-ocean cruisers, would flicker like a mirage, outside time and space. The next impression, having finally entered the city itself, would alternate between melancholy and disappearance, so aptly captured in Visconti’s adaptation of the book by Thomas Mann, Death in Venice, and decadence and perversion, portrayed by Fellini in his film Casanova.



[1] The classical Chinese sacred text, Chapter XXXVII, written according to tradition in 6 BC, during the dynasty of Zhou, the fundamental text of the Tao school of Chinese philosophy.