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Dance of Letters and Music of Words
  The elegant script
  of calligraphy on yellowed paper,
  marred only by
  the spots of tears
  that had once been.
  The curves in every letter,
  distorted through the glass,
  a plea for help,
  an attempt at survival.
  Apart, the letters were beautiful,
  but together, dangerous.
  The loops of black ink
  played a dance with each other,
  twisting and interlocking,
  moving gracefully.
  Yet there was no mistaking
  the music that played,
  of darkness and depression
  and loneliness.
  The loneliness of a man,
  who had sent out a message,
  a note in a bottle,
  in hope of rescue.
  The loneliness of a man,
  stranded at sea,
  all those he loved dead
  all those he craved far.
  The loneliness of a man,
  who hoped to
  use his dearest possession
  to save himself.
  The loneliness of a man,
  whose dearest possession was faith,
  disguised as a piece of paper,
  a pen, and an empty bottle.
  This loneliness transcended through worlds,
  appearing in the music,
  the music of the words,
  at which letters danced
  and black ink cried.
  The music of the words,
  at which paper groaned
  to take the weight
  of letters both harsh and soft,
  dancing forever.
  Yet the sacrifice of the paper
  and the joy of the letters,
  the sadness of the ink
  and the music of the words,
  did nothing for the lonely man
  who was long gone
  when the note in the bottle
  had found a rescue.
  The lonely man had gone,
  cursing the note in the bottle
  for listening to its music
  and not to his desperation.
  When the man
  was finally found
  all that remained was a skeleton,
  clutching another bottle,
  another pen,
  and another paper,
  in the hopes that they could do
  what the first could not,
  and stop
  the music.

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