DARK is a flag on TinyMU* servers which people can set on themselves so that they don't appear in global WHO listings.

It's often used by wizards who want to snoop on people or emit things for scenes, or just by staffers in general who want to hide from players and avoid helping anyone.

Paging a dark staffer is generally considering a hanging offense on most games.

shrieking under folds of blackness
hands clawing at the fabric of an unlit tent
veins swelling in a vacuum, empty eye sockets wide
the midnight of your memory full of monsters
what we know as horror: the crossing of death into life
the corpse walking with a blind smile, the marionettes jerking at their strings
your mother's bloody grin, holding her own head by the hair
and you ran out the door into the apocalypse they promised you
the destiny of the destroyed atom, and a trillion ghosts
left to roam a nightmare planet in unfinished visions

slicing yourself for the feeling of bright sharpness, the reality,
sky on a frozen winter's day, the cloud diamondcutter,
the clarity when you first loved her, when you first recognised her
and became a river running to her; or the deathly fear
when you lay awake in the living night-time, presences
crowding in your awareness, afraid to turn over;
when you took the elevator to the basement of your mind
and found the mutilated man, madness shining in his remaining eye;
the boy in the abandoned house who swallowed a living scorpion;
tongue numb with venom, his skin turned black and livid;
but inside he became a storm of daisies, summer light and wind
someone who would love the demons and angels alike -
an alchemist, at war with the dead physics of his universe.

Strange notes from the other side of a drugged mind:
"what the fuck happens when we die?" and the feeling
of crossing into an unknown land - my only journey:
miles of roads lined with bodies and flowers, tiger paws,
daggers, vertigo footage from cameras falling off cliffs,
or, like faded newsreel, spotted and flickering, set to the sound
of muttering, whispering voices, old showtunes:
my last words, spoken on a sunlit evening stretching into neverness.


This is original work

Dark (?), a. [OE. dark, derk, deork, AS. dearc, deorc; cf. Gael. & Ir. dorch, dorcha, dark, black, dusky.]

1.

Destitute, or partially destitute, of light; not receiving, reflecting, or radiating light; wholly or partially black, or of some deep shade of color; not light-colored; as, a dark room; a dark day; dark cloth; dark paint; a dark complexion.

O dark, dark, dark, amid the blaze of noon, Irrecoverable dark, total eclipse Without all hope of day! milton.

In the dark and silent grave. Sir W. Raleigh.

2.

Not clear to the understanding; not easily through; obscure; mysterious; hidden.

The dark problems of existence. Shairp.

What may seem dark at the first, will afterward be found more plain. Hooker.

What's your dark meaning, mouse, of this light word? Shak.

3.

Destitute of knowledge and culture; in moral or intellectual darkness; unrefined; ignorant.

The age wherin he lived was dark, but he Cobld not want light who taught the world oto see. Denhan.

The tenth century used to be reckoned by mediaeval historians as the darkest part of this intellectual night. Hallam.

4.

Evincing blaxk or foul traits of character; vile; wicked; atrocious; as, a dark villain; a dark deed.

Left him at large to his own dark designs. Milton.

5.

Foreboding evil; gloomy; jealous; suspicious.

More dark and dark our woes. Shak.

A deep melancholy took possesion of him, and gave a dark tinge to all his views of human nature. Macaulay.

There is, in every true woman-s heart, a spark of heavenly fire, which beams and blazes in the dark hour of adversity. W. Irving.

6.

Deprived of sight; blind.

[Obs.]

He was, I think, at this time quite dark, and so had been for some years. Evelyn.

Dark is sometimes used to qualify another adjective; as, dark blue, dark green, and sometimes it forms the first part of a compound; as, dark-haired, dark-eyed, dark-colored, dark-seated, dark-working.

A dark horse, in racing or politics, a horse or a candidate whose chances of success are not known, and whose capabilities have not been made the subject of general comment or of wagers. [Colloq.] -- Dark house, Dark room, a house or room in which madmen were confined. [Obs.] Shak. -- Dark lantern. See Lantern. -- The Dark Ages, a period of stagnation and obscurity in literature and art, lasting, according to Hallam, nearly 1000 years, from about 500 to about 1500 A. D.. See Middle Ages, under Middle. -- The Dark and Bloody Ground, a phrase applied to the State of Kentucky, and said to be the significance of its name, in allusion to the frequent wars that were waged there between Indians. -- The dark day, a day (May 19, 1780) when a remarkable and unexplained darkness extended over all New England. -- To keep dark, to reveal nothing. [Low]

 

© Webster 1913.


Dark (?), n.

1.

Absence of light; darkness; obscurity; a place where there is little or no light.

Here stood he in the dark, his sharp sword out. Shak.

2.

The condition of ignorance; gloom; secrecy.

Look, what you do, you do it still i' th' dark. Shak.

Till we perceive by our own understandings, we are as muc in the dark, and as void of knowledge, as before. Locke.

3. Fine Arts

A dark shade or dark passage in a painting, engraving, or the like; as, the light and darks are well contrasted

.

The lights may serve for a repose to the darks, and the darks to the lights. Dryden.

 

© Webster 1913.


Dark, v. t.

To darken to obscure.

[Obs.]

Milton.

 

© Webster 1913.

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