Poetry

The Petition of Hel.

Through the veil of mist, she treads,
Where all light fades and shadows wed.
Across the fjords of jagged stone,
A mother walks, but not alone.

For grief, her constant guide and ghost,
Has led her where all lost souls coast.
To Helheim’s gates, dark and grim,
She prays the Goddess will hear her hymn.

Her heart, a vessel made of flame,
Burns with her lost child’s given name.
With every step, her body shakes,
But her love for him will never break.

The air is cold, the winds are wild,
Yet nothing chills like death of child.
The ancient gates of Helheim groan, But still she calls, though all alone.

“Hel, great Goddess of the dead,
Return my child,” the mother pled.
“Take my life, my breath, my days,
But let him walk in the sun’s warm rays.”

The silence lingers, thick and still,
As if the earth absorbs her will.
From shadows deep, Hel makes her way,
Her face half-pale as winter’s day.

“I cannot give what fate has sealed,
For death is a truth that can’t be repealed.
But mother, strong with heart so true,
I will grant one gift to you.”

The child appeared, a fleeting spark,
His eyes aglow in the endless dark.
One moment more, one final kiss,
Hel’s precious gift, a fleeting bliss.

Then darkness wrapped him in its shroud,
And silence fell, so harsh and loud.
The mother wept, but rose again,
She had held her child in Helheim’s den.

She turned and left that shadowed realm,
Her heart a bruised and battered helm.
But though she walks through life alone,
She carries him—her flesh, her bone.

2024 ©️

Poetry

An Eternal Love: Hades and Persephone.

In the shrouded depths where shadows creep,
Where endless night and silence sleep,
The king of darkness waits alone,
Upon his cold and ancient throne.

His heart, once barren, void of flame,
Spoke only death, unknown to name.
But in the earth, a flower bloomed,
A spark of life where none presumed.

Persephone, with light so pure,
Her laughter gentle, touch demure,
A goddess bright with verdant grace,
Brought spring to every barren place.

But fate entwined them, night and dawn,
A pomegranate, a story born.
Through winter’s grasp and summer’s reign,
Their love would bloom beyond the chain.

For in his arms, she found her peace,
In her eyes, his darkness ceased.
Together they reign, a balance of two,
In death and life, forever true.

No chains could bind what love had made,
No world could part their endless shade.
For even in the deepest night,
They find each other, purest light.

And so beneath the moonless skies,
Where shadows dance and time denies,
Hades and Persephone stand as one,
Eternal love, their story begun.

©️ 2024

Poetry

Arachne’s Thread

With nimble hands, I wove my art,
A tapestry spun from the depths of heart.
Each thread a story, each stitch a song,
In mortal skill, where none belong.

The loom was mine, my gift, my pride,
In every pattern, the world complied.
Yet gods, they watch with a jealous eye,
To see a mortal touch the sky.

Athena came with wrathful glare,
A challenge born of pride’s despair.
She wove the heavens, grand and wide,
But still, my threads refused to hide.

In every weave, I dared to show
The truth the gods had feared to know:
Their faults, their folly, clothed in grace,
A mirror held to power’s face.

For this, my gift was torn away,
No human hands allowed to stay.
A twisted form, a cursed fate,
To spin in darkness, bound by hate.

Yet in my web, the threads remain,
A testament to mortal pain.
I weave the truth the gods can’t see—
That even cursed, I still am free.

2024 ©️