Poetry
  • 416
  • 0
  • 346
  • Reads 416
  • 0
  • Part 346
Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

A creeping fog clings to the crumbling stone of Blackwater Keep, mirroring the melancholic verses etched within its shadowed halls. Each poem is a fractured shard of memory—a spectral lover’s sigh, the rustle of silk gowns trailing through forgotten corridors, a raven’s feather falling onto a dust-laden manuscript. The air itself tastes of brine and decay, of drowned sailors’ laments carried on the wind. Here, the boundaries between dream and waking blur, and the echoes of Ireland’s ancient, haunted landscapes seep into the very bone. A spectral bride dances just beyond reach, her laughter brittle as frost, while the wild, untamed beauty of the countryside holds a dark, predatory grace. The words themselves are woven from twilight and loss, a whispered confession of longing and the inevitable fading of all earthly things. This is not a collection of poems, but a summoning—a slow descent into a realm where the veil thins, and the ghosts of Ireland’s past rise to claim their due. The scent of peat smoke and damp earth clings to every line, promising a haunting that lingers long after the final verse has dissolved into the night.
Copyright: Public Domain
This license allows anyone to use your story for any purpose, including printing, selling, or adapting it into a film freely.
Chapter List

346

Recommended for you
23 Part
The salt-laced wind howls through crumbling stone, carrying whispers of smugglers and ancient dread. Moonfleet is a place where the sea breathes secrets into the very timbers of the village, a place where shadows cling to cobbled streets and the scent of brine mingles with the dust of forgotten generations. A boy, orphaned and adrift, finds himself drawn into a web of clandestine loyalties, bound to a decaying manor haunted by the legacy of Blackwood’s men—pirates who buried their plunder alongside their ghosts. The narrative unfolds like a tide pulling at submerged wreckage. Moonlight spills across hidden coves where sleek vessels slip through the darkness, their holds swollen with illicit gains. A palpable sense of isolation presses down, isolating the characters in a world where the boundary between the living and the dead is porous. The air hangs heavy with superstition, fueled by local lore of ghostly apparitions and the curse of a silver collar. Each chapter is draped in a melancholic mist, echoing with the rhythmic crash of waves against the shore and the mournful cry of gulls. A slow rot permeates the story, not merely of decaying structures but of decaying morality, as the boy’s innocence is chipped away by the brutal realities of the smuggling trade. The narrative is steeped in the claustrophobia of a closed community, where every face holds a hidden motive and every smile conceals a treacherous bargain. Moonfleet is a place where the past refuses to stay buried, and the sea itself demands its due.
25 Part
A suffocating green hell breathes around him. Not merely jungle, but a primordial weight pressing upon the chest, thick with the rot of ages and the screams of unseen things. Sunlight fractures into emerald shards that barely penetrate the canopy, leaving the forest floor perpetually bruised violet. He is born of loss, a child swallowed by the verdant maw of Africa, inheriting not civilization’s grace, but the brute poetry of claw and fang. The air tastes of rain-soaked fur, of decaying blossoms, of the musk of predators circling just beyond the periphery of vision. It is a world where savagery isn’t merely practiced, but *becomes* the blood in your veins. He moves as a shadow amongst shadows, a ghost amongst ghosts, claimed by a wilderness that has stripped him bare of all human artifice. The apes are not benevolent teachers, but cold, calculating judges in a kingdom of bone and vine. Every rustle of leaves, every guttural cry, is a reminder of the thin, fracturing line between man and beast. He is haunted by glimpses of a past life— a father’s face, a ship’s railing— fragments of memory surfacing amidst the humid delirium. But the jungle demands a singular loyalty. It offers not comfort, but a feral ecstasy born of dominance and despair. To look into his eyes is to glimpse something both utterly human and utterly *unmade*, a creature forged in the crucible of untamed desire and a wilderness that will not relinquish its claim. The scent of his rage is the scent of the jungle itself.