The Yellow Arrow

The Yellow Arrow is the allegorical story by Victor Pelevin written in 1993. It was a part of different collections with works of the author.

Plot

The story is set in "The yellow arrow". It is a train without an end or a beginning, it makes no stops going to the destroyed bridge, which is a whole world for characters. The main character tries to understand this world and to get out of the train in contrast to the other passengers who being indifferent to their fate carry on as usual - trading in nickel melted down from the carriage doors, attending the Upper Bunk avant-garde theatre, and leafing through Pasternak’s Early Trains.[1]

The author uses allegories in the story, railway subject is beaten in any object of this world the set of times.

"I am closest of all to happiness—although I won’t attempt to define just what it is—when I turn away from the window and am aware, with the edge of my consciousness, that a moment ago I was not here, there was simply the world outside the window, and something beautiful and incomprehensible, something which there is absolutely no need to ‘comprehend,’ existed for a few seconds instead of the usual swarm of thoughts, of which one, like a locomotive, pulls all the others after it, absorbs them all and calls itself ‘I’."[2]

See also

References

  1. http://kinnareads.com/2011/08/16/the-yellow-arrow-victor-pelevin/
  2. Victor Pelevin, The Yellow Arrow, translated by Andrew Bromfield.
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