Echoes of the Abyss

 

[The stage is shrouded in darkness, illuminated only by the faint glow of moonlight reflecting off an imaginary sea. The sound of waves crashing against the unseen shore sets the tone for the tragedy that is about to unfold.]

 

Narrator:

Behold, the denizens of the deep,

Whose fates are woven in the watery keep.

In the heart of the abyss, they find their tether,

Bound by love, by loss, by stormy weather.

 

[Enter Maris, a woman haunted by the sea, her eyes betraying a longing for something beyond mortal grasp.]

 

Maris:

I am but a wayward soul,

Adrift upon the ocean's roll.

From the depths, I hear my name,

A siren's call, a lover's claim.

 

[Across the stage comes Triton, Maris's husband, his presence commanding yet burdened by the weight of unseen turmoil.]

 

Triton:

Maris, my beloved, lost at sea,

In the currents of fate, we find our plea.

Though submerged in sorrow's embrace,

Together we'll weather the tempest's chase.

 

[Maris recoils, torn between the desire for freedom and the guilt of forsaking her vows.]

 

Maris:

O Triton, forgive my transgression,

For in the sea's depths, I found obsession.

But the ocean's song, so wild and free,

Beckoned me closer, where I longed to be.

 

[Triton reaches out to Maris, his form fading into the mist like a phantom of the deep.]

 

Triton:

No forgiveness do I seek,

For in the abyss, we find our peak.

To the depths I return, where shadows roam,

A sailor's soul, forever home.

 

[As Triton fades into the darkness, Maris is left alone, haunted by the echoes of her past.]

 

Maris:

Farewell, my love, in the depths below,

Where the currents whisper, where the lost souls go.

In the sea's embrace, I find release,

An echo of longing, a soul at peace.

 

[The stage remains silent, save for the mournful cry of seagulls in the distance, as Maris stands alone, a solitary figure against the backdrop of the unforgiving sea.]

A Tragicomedy in Two Scenes


A machine-writing is fed a selection of lines from classic Western plays containing the word "sea". The artist tasks the machine to generate two texts recycling this input, a scene of tragedy and a scene of comedy. Click anywhere in the text to move back and forth between the tragedy and the comedy.