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A lamentation carved in ancestral ash and silken wrath I was born beneath a roof of borrowed stars, where silence was stitched into my cradlecloth, and every withheld scream became a psalm for the Sentinel of Bloodline me. They speak in tongues dipped in honeyed venom, those kin who wear concern like ceremonial garlands, but their rituals reek of rot their blessings, barbed. The Bearer of Burdens my progenitor spent his prime erecting altars for their comfort, his sweat sanctified their feasts, his spine bent into bridges they now demand be paved with gold and guilt. Two daughters, they hiss, as if our existence were a ledger of loss, as if his labor must be transmuted into inheritance for those who never wept for him. And the Matriarch of Grace my origin flame they veil her with shame, commenting on her visage, demanding she drape herself in submission as if dignity were theirs to dictate. Yet she speaks to them still, with a grace that defies gravity, while I her blood’s echo burn in silence, my fury folded into polite nods and counterfeit smiles. I want to unsheath my voice, etch boundaries into their bones, teach them the sacred geometry of respect. How dare they trespass into the sanctum of our suffering? But I swallow my wrath for the Matriarch’s peace, for the Bearer’s dignity, for the society that weighs silence as virtue. Still, silence is a slow crucifixion. So I write. I ritualize my rage into verse, my grief into glyphs, my defiance into legacy. Let this poem be a blade wrapped in velvet, a dirge for the betrayed, a sanctuary for Sentinels who guard their lineage like sacred flame.
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Oct 1, 2025
Oct 1, 2025 at 9:32 AM UTC
“Silken Wrath & Ancestral Ash: A Dirge for the Betrayed
A lamentation carved in ancestral ash and silken wrath I was born beneath a roof of borrowed stars, where silence was stitched into my cradlecloth, and every withheld scream became a psalm for the Sentinel of Bloodline me. They speak in tongues dipped in honeyed venom, those kin who wear concern like ceremonial garlands, but their rituals reek of rot their blessings, barbed. The Bearer of Burdens my progenitor spent his prime erecting altars for their comfort, his sweat sanctified their feasts, his spine bent into bridges they now demand be paved with gold and guilt. Two daughters, they hiss, as if our existence were a ledger of loss, as if his labor must be transmuted into inheritance for those who never wept for him. And the Matriarch of Grace my origin flame they veil her with shame, commenting on her visage, demanding she drape herself in submission as if dignity were theirs to dictate. Yet she speaks to them still, with a grace that defies gravity, while I her blood’s echo burn in silence, my fury folded into polite nods and counterfeit smiles. I want to unsheath my voice, etch boundaries into their bones, teach them the sacred geometry of respect. How dare they trespass into the sanctum of our suffering? But I swallow my wrath for the Matriarch’s peace, for the Bearer’s dignity, for the society that weighs silence as virtue. Still, silence is a slow crucifixion. So I write. I ritualize my rage into verse, my grief into glyphs, my defiance into legacy. Let this poem be a blade wrapped in velvet, a dirge for the betrayed, a sanctuary for Sentinels who guard their lineage like sacred flame.
“This poem is a sanctuary for those who carry ancestral grief in silence. It speaks for the quiet rebels, the matriarchs veiled in shame, and the daughters who burn with unspoken fury. If your lineage has ever been dismissed, this verse is your velvet blade. Speak back. Have you ever swallowed your voice for the sake of family peace? Which line felt like your own story?
Written by
19/F/bangladesh
Oct 1, 2025
Oct 1, 2025 at 9:32 AM UTC
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