Only Gods Forget

Ash and dust. The pilgrim’s road.
They brought their grief. Their heavy load.
Their vows once lit the sacred flame,
now smoke remains. But not his name.
The echoes fade. The altar’s bare.
Their god is chained. But no one’s there.

When silence wept, they sought his grace,
with broken hearts, with borrowed faith.
They spoke in tongues they never learned,
and lit cold wicks that never burned.
She held her hands on ember’s glow,
for heat, not love. For need, not soul.

He took them in. He asked no why.
He bore their grief. He let them cry.
No vow was asked. No blessings sworn.
He caught their fall. He took their scorn.
And when they healed, they left his throne.
He held their ghosts… and turned to stone.

The temple groaned beneath the snow.
Its breath was still. It let him go.
Ivy climbed where voices sang,
then curled in ash where silence rang.
The pilgrims’ path grew white and blind,
no foot, no flame, no holy sign.

Then echoes stirred along the trail,
through drifting snow and hollow wail.
He felt their steps, their pleading song,
the ache that begged he right their wrong.
The wind returned a voice he knew,
a sound of love, made sharp and true.

They call his name through falling years,
their tone still sweet, but lined with tears.
But gods grow tired of love’s disguise,
of hands that touch with hearts that lie.
The faith he yearned no longer grips,
just hungered cries from empty lips.

He gave them words they never kept.
He kissed her brow while others slept.
He watched them climb what he forgave,
then carve new gods from softer graves.
And in the hush they left behind,
he learned the shape of humankind.

He held the torch beyond the door,
and shattered stones the pilgrims wore.
He rose in fire, in ash and rain,
and burned the house that bore his name.
When the last red ember dawned,
he whispered low, “Your god is gone.”

The snow returned. The ash was wide.
No god to love. No place to hide.
For he’d gone still. He killed the flame.
He answers now to no one’s name.
She had his arms, his blood, his sky,
but love must rest, and gods must die.

Featured image adapted from a photo by Stephen Radford
See more on Unsplash: @steve228uk


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4 responses to “Only Gods Forget”

  1. Richard Walker avatar
    Richard Walker

    Wonderful words, and in my ongoing grief a recognition, a truth…

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Magus West avatar

      Thank you so much, Richard. You won’t believe how glad I am that… through some quiet cosmic chance… our paths crossed and I found someone who shares this ache. Truly grateful. Wishing you light and strength, my friend.

      Like

      1. futuristicallyuniversallyd540c8df36 avatar
        futuristicallyuniversallyd540c8df36

        Hello Magnus

        And Thank you for your recent note

        here is a short verse I wrote (one of many) following the sudden death of my son age 30 in 2005

        You can read some of my other works in my Flickr album “Poetry and Image” I’m sure if you access them that you will understand where my words come from…

        Kind Regards

        Richard

        Troubles

        And still my troubles, trouble me,

        And time not eased my pain.

        I wonder if I will again,

        Find a life to please me,

        Find a life to ease me,

        Find my life again.

        >

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Magus West avatar

        I am so so sorry to hear about your loss, Richard.
        As a father myself, I can’t imagine what it must be like to carry a wound this deep.
        Thank you for sharing your heart and your words, my friend.
        They really moved me.

        And yes, I shall check out your Flickr album.
        Thank you once again.

        Like

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