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Sisyphus, I ask of you: “How might one imagine you content?” A life full spent in ceaseless fight against foe who, in simple rest and abject state, will soon attrite to core and, in pieces, nigh on thee erode. When edge wears edge to nothing, and thy palm hath learned its grit, ‘doth burden bleed to bearer, or is labour all that lives?’ If alleged-immortal boulder breaks, does defiance yet abide? I ask you this again, not in ornamental heed nor in mocking, performed jest; for singular is the beat of an inorganic, apathetic heart, and of a soul bereft Deathless stone of enemy against which your life, for all its sorrow-morrows, is spent in abstract, unfeeling contest. Thus I thrice repeat lucky interrogation, for I struggle to comprehend: “Imagine Sisyphus content; imagine him in glee; imagine him ungrounded, but never him naive.” If, in heart, in line, he lives, in death may his soul be free? How can one fight natural law that withers, but never bleeds? Yet, upon scarred knee, no song of wounded man — hard fought, cavalier-bellowed — vow low-groaned but in constitution, lacking despaired plea… Will future grace idolatrous shapes of unworthy ears, or will it recall the esprit earned in wound; A wisdom borne and tried in scars, a wisdom won but never bought?
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Dec 6, 2025
Dec 6, 2025 at 3:19 AM UTC
Yes, but, if?
Sisyphus, I ask of you: “How might one imagine you content?” A life full spent in ceaseless fight against foe who, in simple rest and abject state, will soon attrite to core and, in pieces, nigh on thee erode. When edge wears edge to nothing, and thy palm hath learned its grit, ‘doth burden bleed to bearer, or is labour all that lives?’ If alleged-immortal boulder breaks, does defiance yet abide? I ask you this again, not in ornamental heed nor in mocking, performed jest; for singular is the beat of an inorganic, apathetic heart, and of a soul bereft Deathless stone of enemy against which your life, for all its sorrow-morrows, is spent in abstract, unfeeling contest. Thus I thrice repeat lucky interrogation, for I struggle to comprehend: “Imagine Sisyphus content; imagine him in glee; imagine him ungrounded, but never him naive.” If, in heart, in line, he lives, in death may his soul be free? How can one fight natural law that withers, but never bleeds? Yet, upon scarred knee, no song of wounded man — hard fought, cavalier-bellowed — vow low-groaned but in constitution, lacking despaired plea… Will future grace idolatrous shapes of unworthy ears, or will it recall the esprit earned in wound; A wisdom borne and tried in scars, a wisdom won but never bought?
chrissergio
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Dec 6, 2025
Dec 6, 2025 at 3:19 AM UTC
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