No host of golden daffodils do I see when I look around me. Just the debris of a life, cut short by a knife. I wandered lonely not over vale, but over my body Lying prone on the floor, no breath does it host anymore. My eyes gaze sightless into the distance, a sphinx upon the waste land of the laminated floor. My hair limp, not fluttering in the breeze, my blood cooling into a pool my death scene, gives such chills, that renders even golden daffodils pale Death does indeed ride a pale horse. He shows no remorse. Wilted in a vase, wasted on the floor, I await my light, my open door.
And then my heart with pleasure fills, And dances with the daffodils. Wordsworth