New Delhi, May 28 -- Franz Kafka, one of the most influential writers of the 20th century, is often remembered for his haunting explorations of alienation, anxiety, bureaucracy and the absurdity of modern life. Yet, beneath the darkness of Kafka's fiction, there also exists a quieter philosophical tenderness: the idea that life, even when difficult, still contains hidden grace.

The quote, "Life's splendour forever lies in wait..," captures that rare Kafka-like tension between despair and possibility. It does not promise that life will always be beautiful on the surface. It does not say that happiness arrives easily, loudly or on schedule. Instead, it suggests something more subtle: splendour is always present, waiting to be noticed, reco...