The tracks were later added to Dead Can Dance's self-titled debut album when it was re-released on CD.
As Perry explains: The naked blindfolded figure, representing primal man deprived of perception, stands, within the confines of a garden (the world) containing a fountain and trees laden with fruit.
His left arm stretches out – the grasping for knowledge – towards a fruit bearing tree, its trunk encircled by a snake.
It is a Blakean universe in which mankind can only redeem itself, can only rid itself of blindness, through the correct interpretation of signs and events that permeate the fabric of nature's laws.
[1]AllMusic retrospectively described the EP as "the clear transition between the group's competent but derivative goth start and something much, much more special.