"We were talking about the space between us all and the people who hide themselves behind a wall of illusion. Never glimpse the truth - then it's far too late when they pass away"
About this Quote
Harrison aims straight at the quiet tragedy of distance: not the dramatic breakup, but the slow, polite drift where everyone agrees to pretend nothing is wrong. “The space between us all” reads like an emotional geography lesson - a reminder that separation isn’t just physical or logistical, it’s cultivated through habit, ego, and fear. Then he tightens the screw with “people who hide themselves behind a wall of illusion.” That “wall” is doing double duty: it’s the persona we build to stay safe, and the social contract that lets others not ask harder questions.
The line “Never glimpse the truth” isn’t merely about deception; it’s about denial as a lifestyle. Harrison’s spiritual streak shows here: truth isn’t an opinion you trade in conversation, it’s something you’re meant to face before time closes the window. The dash into mortality - “far too late when they pass away” - is the real engine of the quote. He’s pointing to regret as a delayed consequence: you only realize how much was unsaid when the person is no longer available to hear it.
Contextually, this lands in Harrison’s post-Beatles worldview: fame as a factory for illusion, and intimacy as collateral damage. After years of being watched, mythologized, and misunderstood, he sounds less like a scolding guru than someone pleading for a more honest kind of attention - the kind you give before grief turns clarity into a souvenir.
The line “Never glimpse the truth” isn’t merely about deception; it’s about denial as a lifestyle. Harrison’s spiritual streak shows here: truth isn’t an opinion you trade in conversation, it’s something you’re meant to face before time closes the window. The dash into mortality - “far too late when they pass away” - is the real engine of the quote. He’s pointing to regret as a delayed consequence: you only realize how much was unsaid when the person is no longer available to hear it.
Contextually, this lands in Harrison’s post-Beatles worldview: fame as a factory for illusion, and intimacy as collateral damage. After years of being watched, mythologized, and misunderstood, he sounds less like a scolding guru than someone pleading for a more honest kind of attention - the kind you give before grief turns clarity into a souvenir.
Quote Details
| Topic | Truth |
|---|
More Quotes by George
Add to List









