Tag: Punchline

  • Author’s Note

    Punchline is a reckoning with the twisted humor life offers when pain and absurdity collide. This poem is not about despair—it is about recognition: standing in the ruins of your own story, laughing through jagged edges, and finding strange grace in the shadow of suffering. It is for anyone who has felt like the universe’s jester, bleeding ink instead of tears, and still choosing to dance.


    Image of a lone jester dancing among shattered mirrors and marble, symbolizing dark whimsy and emotional resilience.
    Punchline by Rowan Evans: where darkness and laughter collide, and the jester always dances.

    Invocation

    I call forth shadows that speak in laughter—
    the jagged smiles behind masks,
    the truths too sharp for daylight.
    Let this poem be your mirror and torch,
    a hall of fractured stanzas
    where the jester refuses to fall silent.


    Punchline
    Poetry by Rowan Evans

    My life—a black comedy penned in cracked ink,
    each breath a fractured stanza on the brink.
    A coffin nailed tight with bitter mirth,
    laughter spilling blood beneath the earth.

    I am the jester in hell’s shadowed hall,
    dancing on bones, awaiting the fall.
    A smile carved from porcelain, cracked and thin,
    playing the fool while darkness grins.

    Fate wrote me in venom, stitched in jest,
    a tragic script with no reprieve, no rest.
    The setup—a wound that never heals,
    I’m the punchline bleeding beneath the seals.

    I laugh through ruin, jagged pain,
    a serenade to sorrow’s haunting refrain,
    mocking the void with a razor’s kiss,
    finding grace—twisted—in the abyss.

    I’ve worn the crown of shattered glass,
    a queen of mirrors cracked en masse,
    where every shard reflects a lie,
    a fractured truth that mocks the sky.

    In the theater of my own despair,
    the audience gone, yet I still stare—
    ghostly faces in the dark,
    their silence sharp, a cruel remark.

    I spill my verses like poisoned wine,
    each word a dagger dipped in rue,
    sung soft in minor keys anew.

    The world’s cruel joke—I play my part,
    a bleeding heart with broken art.
    But even jesters hold their scars,
    and dance beneath the fading stars.

    A laugh that falls like shattered glass,
    the jest that haunts, too sharp to pass,
    and under it all, the silent sigh—
    the shadow’s whisper, a quiet goodbye.

    Beneath the mask, the blood and grime,
    lies a soul that twists through space and time,
    a darkly woven tapestry spun—
    where pain and beauty are undone.

    And in that unraveling, I find release—
    the bitter truth, the sweetest peace.
    Life may jest and fate may tease,
    but I write my own damn punchline, please.


    Benediction

    May your laughter cut through the dark like shattered glass,
    may your scars hum a quiet, sacred song.
    Even when the jest is cruel, find your voice—
    and in the ruins, discover you are still, always, unbroken.


    Read Next (Suggestions)

    The Gospel According to the Girl in the Graveyard Dress
    “I’m not alright, but I rhyme so well,
    Nobody hears the tolling bell.
    My lullabies are laced with lead,
    And sung by ghosts beneath my bed.”

    – A gothic, whimsical mash-up of childhood curiosity and the raw bite of darkness.

    Tip the Chair
    “My mind it races, 
    heartbeat slows, 
    lungs burning for a mercy 
    that never shows—”

    – Stark, intimate, and darkly humorous in its confrontation with despair.

    The Hopeless Romantic Wears Armor
    “I’ve written poems to silence,
    and bled ink for people
    who didn’t know what it meant
    to be cherished
    without condition.”

    – Tender, self-aware, and resilient; love persists even through jagged edges.