"He recalled the noisy music at dinner and said to himself,
'Noise has one advantage. It drowns out words.' And suddenly
he realized that all his life he had done nothing but talk, write, lecture,
concoct sentences, search for formulations and amend them, so in the end no words were precise, their meanings were obliterated, their content
lost, they turned into trash, chaff, dust, sand; prowling through his brain,
tearing at his head, they were his insomnia, his illness. And what he yearned for
at that moment, vaguely but with all his might, was unbounded music, absolute
sound, a pleasant and happy all-encompassing, over-powering, window-rattling din
to engulf, once and for all, the pain, the futility, the vanity of words. Music
was the negation of sentences, music was the anti-word!"
Milan Kundera, The Unbearable Lightness of Being