

Qfwfq is well able to understand the nature of space and time. He is eternally separated from his love by traveling in parallel lines, but he takes advantage of the shape of space to meet her and attack his equally inaccessible rival. In "The Form of Space," Qfwfq is presumably the unnamed narrator. In "Without Colors" and "The Aquatic Uncle," the world is changing, and Qfwfq is anxious for change, while his loves long for a past time and lose themselves in search of it, as does his sister in "At Daybreak." In "The Dinosaurs," too, Qfwfq's love wrestles with her ideas of past and is not able to let go to simply move into the future. His love in "All at One Point" begins the expansion of the universe, disappearing into its stuff through her generosity as she releases Qfwfq from being contained in a single point. Vhd Vhd is taken from him by the retreating moon. The changes in the universe wrench him from his loves.

In "The Distance of the Moon," "All at One Point," "Without Colors," "The Aquatic Uncle," "The Dinosaurs," and "The Spiral," Qfwfq is in love with an unattainable woman. He is also consistently a harbinger of change in the universe as it evolves. He is self-consciously fearful of the judgment of others, and he is competitive against his rivals in both love and play. Qfwfq is constantly falling in love and pursuing love.

Sometimes he is an animal, sometimes a person or sometimes an abstract entity. Qfwfq is an eternal and abstract character who lives throughout all the ages of the universe and exists in many different places at many different times. Qfwfqappears in The Distance of the Moon, At Daybreak, A Sign in Space, All
