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The age that has gone — I remember: one night I was a madman for you, my tongue a bell of fever ringing your name into the dark. All night I burned in my own body, and at dawn, still trembling, I asked the world — Are you safe? Perhaps I could have made you understand. But understanding is a shallow thing. You would never have drowned where I drowned every day. You were busy — maybe with another voice, another hour that wore a softer light. In the gallery of your life, I was the painting turned toward the wall. You never wondered what I looked like. You never saw that I was still breathing. And now… the age has gone. What I wanted — only once — was for you to stop your leaving long enough to see me. Not as a shadow. But as the room that held you when the world went cold. Look — my eyes are still a night-watch over every fever you never caught, every prayer you never heard. Inside my ribs, a small lamp burns — your name, still lit, still waiting for a guest who never arrives. If you looked, you would see an empty chair worn smooth by waiting, a door I forgot how to close, and a man who still practices your name in the dark. But you never looked. You were walking toward other dawns, other hands that asked for less. And I became a habit of your absence — not a wound, but something worse: a soft forgetting. So I stood there. Door open. Air free. The path you never took became my only home. Now the age has gone. Yet sometimes, without warning, a fever returns — not of the body, but of the memory of a body that once burned for you. And I find myself, as if no time has passed, whispering into the silence — Are you safe? No answer comes. Not from cruelty. Because the question itself has become a prayer with no one left to listen. Only a rain without sound falls against my window — each drop a small, cold truth: You are already gone. But before you vanish completely, turn once. Not for hope — hope is dust. Turn to honour the weight of someone who once stayed awake through an entire fever, through an entire life, just to know: Were you ever, even for a moment, held by a love that asked for nothing except to know you were safe?
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May 2
May 2, 2026 at 12:30 AM UTC
The Age That Has Gone
The age that has gone — I remember: one night I was a madman for you, my tongue a bell of fever ringing your name into the dark. All night I burned in my own body, and at dawn, still trembling, I asked the world — Are you safe? Perhaps I could have made you understand. But understanding is a shallow thing. You would never have drowned where I drowned every day. You were busy — maybe with another voice, another hour that wore a softer light. In the gallery of your life, I was the painting turned toward the wall. You never wondered what I looked like. You never saw that I was still breathing. And now… the age has gone. What I wanted — only once — was for you to stop your leaving long enough to see me. Not as a shadow. But as the room that held you when the world went cold. Look — my eyes are still a night-watch over every fever you never caught, every prayer you never heard. Inside my ribs, a small lamp burns — your name, still lit, still waiting for a guest who never arrives. If you looked, you would see an empty chair worn smooth by waiting, a door I forgot how to close, and a man who still practices your name in the dark. But you never looked. You were walking toward other dawns, other hands that asked for less. And I became a habit of your absence — not a wound, but something worse: a soft forgetting. So I stood there. Door open. Air free. The path you never took became my only home. Now the age has gone. Yet sometimes, without warning, a fever returns — not of the body, but of the memory of a body that once burned for you. And I find myself, as if no time has passed, whispering into the silence — Are you safe? No answer comes. Not from cruelty. Because the question itself has become a prayer with no one left to listen. Only a rain without sound falls against my window — each drop a small, cold truth: You are already gone. But before you vanish completely, turn once. Not for hope — hope is dust. Turn to honour the weight of someone who once stayed awake through an entire fever, through an entire life, just to know: Were you ever, even for a moment, held by a love that asked for nothing except to know you were safe?
shoaib005
Written by
25/M/Rangpur, Bangladesh
May 2
May 2, 2026 at 12:30 AM UTC
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