Merry is the marionette, almost a miniature man, who finds his wires new-severed do flap where once strum-tight they dictated the when to fall octopus-limp or to dance a sprightly jig accompanied by silly jug tunes he never even liked.
Stringlessness comes at a price. On disjointed steps, Merry would he have to make his own way as an unprovided walker. He sets out, philosophical tomes in hand, for the wooded fringes where a brook gurgles and he'll grapple with consequence.
"I have a goodly appetite," Merry remarks. "I'll attack these meaty words with fork and knife." But the ideas do stew and uncomfortably stowed between 'Being and Nothingness,' Merry wonders whether freedom is not what he bargained for.
Just then he's startled by the tug of wires gone taut, and caught up in the dangle of an enormous eagle, its talons eagerly trying to untangle the strings of a new play thing. Merry might have wept, but who could cry over the spilling of sour milk?
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.