I’m a sucker for a good metaphor. So I’m going to use the one that is arguably my favorite. It’s the idea of a bird in the sky. There are several different ways a bird can be viewed. One is the bird that is sitting on a branch all day. Another is the bird that is flying. Another is the bird that has only just started its flight.
I’m not actually sure what the connection between these different views of a bird is. The best I can make of it is that they all represent different aspects of the same thing. I think I’ve been seeing this metaphor for years, but its been a while since I’ve thought to think more than once. One time I used it to describe a person who was a “fairy godmother” to me. That’s it.
You know that saying, “The first time I saw the Mona Lisa, it was on a mountaintop in a little town in Italy.” Thats right, its the Mona Lisa.
This is not a thing we are talking about in this article. I have seen this metaphor used as a way to describe an entire worldview that has been in place for a long time and one that we are all unaware of or have never experienced. To my mind, this is one of those cases where the metaphor is the whole story, so I wont go into all the details.
You can think of pandus as the “god of the mountain” and the Mona Lisa as the “god of the desert.” I think that’s actually a pretty apt description. Pandus is the ultimate mountain, the ultimate god, the ultimate mountain-god. He is the last and greatest god of the mountain, and the Mona Lisa is the god of the desert. They are each other’s mountain of knowledge, but they are also each other’s desert of knowledge.
My intention is not to make pandus into a god, but just to put it in the context of the movie. Pandus is the ultimate god of the mountain, the ultimate god, the ultimate mountain of knowledge, the ultimate mountain of gods, god of gods, god of gods, god of gods. He is the ultimate god of the desert mountains and the monasteries.
Pandus is the god of the desert, the god of the mountain, the god of the temples. When he takes on these names, he assumes all the responsibilities of the gods and becomes the god of all gods. Pandus is a god of the mountains, the god of the deserts, the god of the temples.
Pandus is a god of the desert, the god of the mountains, the god of the deserts, the god of the temples. For centuries his worship has been a secret, guarded by the monks who live in the desert, the desert guardians of the mountains. The monks work hard to keep the desert from descending into chaos, which will create a new, dangerous god, who will destroy them all.
Pandus is not just a god of the desert. He is the god of the mountains, the god of the deserts, the god of the temples. For centuries his worship has been a secret, guarded by the monks who live in the desert, the desert guardians of the mountains. The monks work hard to keep the desert from descending into chaos, which will create a new, dangerous god, who will destroy them all.
Pandus is the “god of the mountains” and the “god of the deserts”. It is he who has turned the desert into a place of death and chaos. He has also been known to give the desert a bit of a spiritual kick. The monks have also been known to create statues of Pandus in the desert. The monks are the ones who create the desert and control the mountain god.