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Marionette of Flesh in a Borrowed Dress

"Marionette of Flesh in a Borrowed Dress" - Daniel Henry Rodgers
The hourglass, a skeletal jester, mocks in the tomb's chill, Each falling grain an emaciated sigh, "Soon you'll cease to be." The mirror's cold reflection, a Gorgon's ghastly guise, A marionette of flesh with vacant, hollow, colorless eyes. The worms, like pallid mourners, watch me shrink, A marionette of organs, cold and pale, pink. This flesh, a borrowed dress, once sprightly, Now stained and thin, Holds tight the secrets only death can win. This borrowed dress, a shroud where my story's writ, In laughter's faded stitch, and tear's accusing slit. A map of life etched deep, with scars that mar the grain, A raven of fleeting triumphs, a pendulum of ceaseless pain. In the shadowed hollows where sorrow resides, I languish, marionettes of fate's cruel designs. Each scratch and cut a lament, each tear a bitter sea, Bound by the chains of my mortality. In this borrowed dress, I mourn what could have been, Lost in the convulsion of my own sin. Transformed, but not redeemed, I drift into the void, My spirits shattered, my dreams destroyed. In the silence of eternity, I find my rest, Lost in the bodies of my own detest. And though this shell, a chrysalis, soon withers, and decays, I cast aside the shroud, no longer bound or worn, Accept the endless night, where a new self-forlorn is bourne. Transformed, a residual relic, through the void, I fly, Suture with stardust catgut, a worn scroll in the sky.

Copyright © Daniel Henry Rodgers

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