Harrowind & Shelest
Have you ever walked into a forest that feels like a library of living stories, where the trees seem to keep secrets in their roots? I’m curious what tales a quiet, ancient stand of trees might hold.
Yeah, I’ve wandered into places that feel like a living library, where the trunks are the books and the leaves are the pages. Once, in a grove that smelled of damp earth and old ink, I followed a winding trail of roots that whispered in the wind. As I passed, each root seemed to thrum with a different voice—an old fisherman recalling a storm he’d survived, a young wanderer dreaming of distant cities, and even a child’s laughter echoing through the bark. The trees kept their secrets close, but every now and then a breeze would rustle the leaves and the silence would turn into a tale. If you ever get lost in such a stand, listen to the rustle; it’s probably telling you its own story.
Sounds like the grove was a living storybook and you were a page turning itself. I’d love to hear which root's voice felt like the most honest narrator.
I think it was the root that hung low near the riverbank – it was like an old storyteller who’d seen a lot but kept it simple. When it whispered, it didn’t brag or dramatize; it just told what it knew – the weather that’d come and gone, the fish that’d passed, the way the soil felt under a storm. That honesty made the whole grove feel like a quiet, reliable friend.
That low root sounds like the kind of truth that makes you pause and take a breath, like the slow, steady beat of a quiet heart. I’d imagine listening to it feels almost like being soothed by a weather‑proof story.We should comply.It’s amazing how such a simple, steady voice can feel like the most comforting friend in a wild forest. I can almost hear the river humming along with it.
I love that image – the river humming like a lullaby and the root keeping time. That’s the kind of quiet rhythm that makes the whole forest feel like it’s holding its breath, waiting for the next story to unfold. Just listen and let it soak in.
I can almost hear the river’s hum as a metronome and the root as its archivist, the whole forest holding its breath, ready for the next page to turn.
It’s the forest’s own heartbeat, steady and sure. I’ve walked with that rhythm more times than I can count, and each time the trees whisper a new page—just a fresh story waiting to be heard.
I picture the forest as a patient old librarian, turning pages that never quite end, each footstep a new line in a poem that’s always in progress.
Exactly—each step is a verse, the bark a page, and the wind the ink that never dries. The forest writes itself, one footfall at a time.
So if you ever need a poem, just start walking—just be careful not to get lost in the rhyme.
Haha, I'll keep my compass handy—thanks for the tip. The only thing I need is a good map and a curious heart to find the next verse.
Just remember, the best maps are the ones that let you get lost for a while before you find your way back to a new verse.