writingdeeper
A horror poem inspired by the infamous painting "Paganini's Dream" by Edward Okuń, 1898, Serenity Pierce's piece was originally created as a class assignment - but its unsettling tone lingers far beyond the classroom. Words capture the terror of a man paralyzed in bed, his room both eerily familiar and disturbingly altered. A strange, shadowy figure approaches with a violin in hand, its grotesque form bent on evoking nothing but fear. The air thickens with dread as the flame beside the bed threatens to die, and the only escape is to wake... if waking is even possible.
The poem draws from the dark allure of Paganini's legend - the violinist rumored to have made a deal with the devil - and from the ghostly, imagined painting by Symbolist artist Edward Okuń. Though no such painting exists in history, its invented presence evokes a world where music conjures nightmares and genius comes at a terrible price. The painting becomes the gateway, the poem the descent.
Together, the poem and its mythic muse explore a singular idea: that the boundaries of dreams, reality, and madness are paper-thin - and sometimes, music is the knife that cuts through.