Mount Analogue
A Novel of Symbolically Authentic Non-Euclidean Adventures in Mountain Climbing
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Gesprochen von:
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Mr. Anthony Blake
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René Daumal
Mount Analogue is René Daumal’s extraordinary allegory of the inner ascent: a voyage toward a hidden mountain whose summit reaches toward heaven, suggesting that a real path to truth must be possible.
The narrator sets sail aboard the yacht Impossible with a small company of seekers and climbers in search of Mount Analogue: a real yet concealed peak, invisible to ordinary perception and accessible only through an alignment of knowledge, attention, and readiness.
At once an adventure story, a philosophical fable, and a spiritual map, Daumal’s unfinished novel speaks with particular resonance to readers familiar with the Work of G. Gurdjieff. Deeply influenced by Gurdjieff’s teaching through Alexandre and Jeanne de Salzmann, Daumal gives Mount Analogue an atmosphere of practical search: the need to wake up, find companions, take the next step, and never lose sight of the highest aim.
Written with wit, precision, and poetic force, the book invites us into a world where the visible and invisible meet, where climbing becomes a metaphor for inner transformation, and where the true summit remains both distant and urgently present.
Daumal died in 1944 before completing the novel, leaving it to break off abruptly in the middle of a sentence. Yet this unfinished quality gives Mount Analogue its haunting power: the ascent continues beyond the final page.
“Keep your eye fixed on the way to the top, but don’t forget to look right in front of you. The last step depends on the first. Don’t think you’re there just because you see the summit. Watch your footing, be sure of the next step, but don’t let that distract you from the highest goal. The first step depends on the last.” —René Daumal
Dedicated to Alexandre de Salzmann, a close pupil of Gurdjieff, Mount Analogue remains a luminous invitation to those who sense that the way upward is also the way inward.
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