:06:03
If he isn't, he's left traces
of his scared presence:
:06:07
the silence, the smell of grass,
the chill of fresh water.
:06:13
Yes, everything's sacred.
:06:16
But sanctity is also a curse.
:06:21
Whilst the gods love, they also hate.
:06:42
Maybe you think that besides
being a liar, I'm also too poetic.
:06:49
But for ancient man, myths and rituals
are concrete experiences,
:06:53
which are even included
in his daily existence.
:06:58
For him, reality
is a totally perfect unit,
:07:02
and the emotion he feels at the sight
of a summer sky, for example,
:07:09
equals the more internal, personal
experiences of modern man.
:07:15
You'll go to your Uncle, who stole
your throne, and reclaim your rights.
:07:20
To eliminate you,
he'll have to come up with an excuse.
:07:23
He'll send you on a quest,
maybe to retrieve the golden fleece.
:07:27
That way, you'll travel
to a distant land across the sea.
:07:31
You'll experience things in a world
we can only imagine.
:07:35
Life there is very realistic.
:07:38
Because only he who is mythical
is realistic and vice versa.
:07:43
This is what
our divine reason foresees.
:07:47
That which it can't foresee, sadly,
are the errors it will lead you to.
:07:54
Who knows how many there'll be?
:07:57
That which man has witnessed
in the cultivation of grains,