Standing on tiptoe and looking past the others’ heads through the bars of the window, I caught an eerie glimpse of my native town.
We all felt more dead than alive, since we thought that our transport was heading for the camp at Mauthausen and that we had only one or two weeks to live.
I had a distinct feeling that I saw the streets, the squares and the houses of my childhood with the eyes of a dead man who had come back from another world and was looking down on a ghostly city.
— Viktor E. Frankl, Man’s Search for Meaning, 1946, Beacon Press (2006 edition), p. 48