profound
adjective
1a: having intellectual depth and insight
b: difficult to fathom or understand
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/profound
"Toothbrush in the jaw toothbrush brush tooth jaw foam dome in the foam Roman dome tooth toothbrush toothpick pickpocket socket rocket ..."
Peter Keating squinted his eyes, his glance unfocused as for a great distance, but put the book down. The book was thin & black, with scarlet letters forming: Clouds & Shrouds by Lois Cook. The jacket said it was a record of Miss Cook's travels around
the world.
Keating leaned back with a sense of warmth & well-being. He liked this book. It had made the routine of his Sunday morning breakfast a profound spiritual experience; he was certain that it was profound, because he didn't understand it.
/The Fountainhead/, Ayn Rand
https://www.pxu.org/cms/lib/AZ01001825/Centricity/Domain/4101/Rand-Ayn-The-Fountainhead.pdf
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