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William Shakespeare

Tommy started to cry. "oh, shut up!" Danielle snapped. "You're wearing a bikini and that's final"

O, yonder lo, Tommy, thou dost shed forth tears, A stream that doth the soul's distress reveal, But hark, fair Danielle, speak thou so harsh? For a bikini clad, dost it bring such wrath? Indeed, the fickle nature of mankind prevails, Where what is worn upon the flesh does mar, The tranquil sea of harmony it disrupts, And stirs within the hearts a tempest's rage. But sit, fair friends, and ponder on this scene, For Tommy's tears do tell a tale profound, A tale of innocence and fragile hearts, Of youth beset by judgments so unkind. Who are we, to dictate what attires befit, To judge the cloth that wraps a tender soul? Should it provoke such bitter quarrels fierce, Or shall we seek to find a higher truth? But, Tommy, pray tell, why dost thou weep so? Why doth thy heart in sorrow's grip be held? Is it because fair Danielle speaks her will, To don a gown that she deemed to be right? Nay, for beneath this veil of salty tears, Lies a deeper turmoil that thou dost bear. Within thy breast, a storm of anguish calms, A yearning for acceptance, dear Tommy's plight. O, Danielle fair, why dost thou so insist, On Tommy's choice of garment in this hour? Should not freedom's cry resound within our souls, To grant each other liberty of dress? For in true sovereignty, we all should thrive, To choose our attire, without disdain or scorn, To let the heart be known through outward guise, And cast away the false illusions' thorny crown. In truth, my friends, the outer shell we wear, Dost not define the essence of our being, For deep within, a spirit lies untamed, Unfettered by the garments we adorn. So let not judgment cloud our weary eyes, But rather seek to find the wondrous soul, That dwells within both Tommy and fair Danielle, And celebrate the beauty that lies within. Let not the tears of Tommy be in vain, But serve as mirrors to our souls' reflection, So we may glimpse the fragility we bear, And foster empathy towards fellow beings, For in the end, it matters not the cloak, The raiment worn beneath the sun's embrace, But rather the compassion in our hearts, That shall endure when garments fade away.