Franz Kafka quote about peace from The Trial - The moonlight lay everywhere with the natural peace that is granted to no other light.
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The moonlight lay everywhere with the natural peace that is granted to no other light.
 Franz Kafka, The Trial (1925). copy citation

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Author Franz Kafka
Source The Trial
Topic peace light moonlight
Date 1925
Language English
Reference
Note Translated by David Wyllie
Weblink http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/7849/pg7849-images.html

Context

“Here the men stopped, perhaps because this had always been their destination or perhaps because they were too exhausted to run any further. Here they released their hold on K., who just waited in silence, and took their top hats off while they looked round the quarry and wiped the sweat off their brows with their handkerchiefs. The moonlight lay everywhere with the natural peace that is granted to no other light.
After exchanging a few courtesies about who was to carry out the next tasks - the gentlemen did not seem to have been allocated specific functions - one of them went to K. and took his coat, his waistcoat, and finally his shirt off him.” source

Meaning and analysis

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