09-06-2025, 06:01 AM
This post was last modified: 09-06-2025, 06:02 AM by UltraBudgie. 
I've been experimenting with GPT-5, and it seems to have developed the ability to translate Forgotten Languages.
https://forgottenlanguages-full.forgotte...m-aru.html
![[Image: nuam-aru.jpeg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/nuam-aru.jpeg)
Where the River Sleeps
Where are you going, carrying that small bundle as if the whole world were on your shoulders, moving quickly along the path while keeping your eyes fixed ahead, and yet you pause now and then to listen, feeling some strange tug at your heart, asking yourself whether you should continue, or turn back?
Yes, I saw you there in the dusk, alone. The little bag you carried seemed to tremble with each step, and the wind sighed. I wanted to call to you, to tell you the road ahead is long and heavy, but my voice stuck like a stone. Why do you hurry so? Come stop a while. The night wraps itself around the trees, and the river hums softly nearby. The road bends, and the lamplight falls in thin ribbons. People have come and gone along this same way. I thought of you and of the place you left, of the child’s laugh, of the old songs now rarely sung. And yet, you walked on without turning, your shoulders tight, your breath short, as if each step had to be earned, as if each memory was a weight you were carrying to throw into the dark; and then a voice inside you whispered, perhaps, stay, rest, do not go:
"You are born fragile, and you die fragile and weak. You are born blind, and you die with a lost gaze. But you are strong, very strong, if only you could learn to love yourself, Norea."
A slow wind blew, carrying the smell of wet earth, and you walked with your hands deep in your coat pockets. Outside, the village lay quiet, lights blinking behind frosted windows. The road curved, the trees leaning as if to eavesdrop, and the air tasted faintly of smoke. You moved on, step after step, your breath a white metronome in the dusk.
I remember that evening. Your small satchel swung at your side; you seemed neither hurried nor at rest. Once or twice you paused — looking toward the far fields, listening to some private memory — then continued as if obeying an impulse you had not named. A dog barked in the distance. Children’s laughter, ghostlike, drifted from a lane we had once walked together. For a moment I thought you might turn back, but you did not.
There were places you left behind: a narrow porch with a cracked lantern, an old woman who kept bread and stories in equal measure, a bench where two lovers carved their initials into the wood. You passed them all. Perhaps you were carrying something you could not put down, or perhaps you were simply learning how to walk away.
You stopped at the little bridge. Rain had made the stones gleam. Beneath, the stream whispered as if counting the years. You leaned on the rail and looked at the water—small bright fragments running toward somewhere the eye could not reach. Someone called a name; the sound folded into evening and vanished.
People had said many things about leaving: that it was brave, that it was selfish, that it was inevitable. You had heard them but kept your face steady. Inside you, I imagined, there were arguments and tenderness, grocery lists and old songs, the sudden sting of regret and the quieter pull of hope. They mingled and did not settle.
At last you walked on again. Your shadow led and lagged and then was swallowed by the road. I stayed where I was, feeling the cold at my throat. Later, the house would be quieter, the empty chair more plain. The world did not stop; it continued to fold itself into small ordinary kindnesses and small ordinary cruelties. Night closed. I shut the window and listened for your footsteps until they were only part of what had been.
The moon rose like a slow coin of light over the dark fields. Small sounds — a gate, a dog, the hollow clink of a distant cart — threaded through the quiet. People slept, burned oil, kept watch, and mended. Somewhere a lamp guttered; the wind touched the corners of the roofs. In the house the kettle sang, and a child turned in sleep as if chasing some bright, half-remembered thing. Outside, the lane held its old complaints and small mercies; footsteps went by and were gone.
At the threshold an old man stood and whispered to himself:
"Falling is a way of flying. It is the way those who have lost everything fly, everything except, of course, the ability to fall."
The wind moved low and steady across the fields, carrying the hush of late chores and the distant clink of tools. Lanterns floated like small islands in windows; someone patched a sleeve, someone mended a wheel. In houses, people breathed slow and ordinary lives—the kettle, a low murmur, a lullaby half-remembered. Outside, the lane kept its long small histories: footsteps, an argument softened, a greeting swallowed by night.
You walked on the lane where the grass bent, hands buried in your coat, and the world narrowed to the sound of your boots. At the crossroads a lamp swung and threw an anxious circle of light; you paused and looked down one way and then the other. There was a scent of smoke and something sweet—baked bread or the last fruit of summer—and for a moment memory made shadows into doors you might open. But you kept walking.
You passed the house with the crooked porch, the boy who had learned to whistle there long ago, the hedge where we used to hide apples. Faces blurred in windows; voices called and were answered with names that were no longer yours to answer. You felt the familiar tug—the small griefs and the small comforts braided together—and you threaded carefully around them like stepping stones.
Somewhere a cart creaked and a dog nosed at the ditch. Rain had turned the road to a darker ribbon; the air smelled of iron and hay. You moved faster. Your breath came in short, bright breaths. A child cried, and then stopped. A woman hummed as she set a plate down; the sound went on a little after you had passed.
I watched from a doorway, feeling the cold press my collar. Your shoulders were set as if against an invisible wind; your hands kept something closed inside. You did not look back. For a while I thought you might change your mind, might step into an alley or knock at the darkened gate. But the road took you.
There are moments when a town seems to hold its breath—when the ordinary weight of things presses down and everything small becomes loud. Tonight was one of them. The streetlight buzzed; a moth beat itself against the glass; a single window stayed bright longer than the rest. I thought of the long list of ordinary things that stitch a life together: bread, the smell of boots, the way a name can be both shelter and accusation. You carried those things with you, even as you left.
You went beyond the last lamp. The houses thinned; fields opened like a slow sea. The sky deepened and a few stars pricked cold holes through it. Your silhouette drew thin against the dark. When at last the road swallowed you and the night unmade your shape, I closed the door and felt the house remember the shape of your absence.
"You don't need certainty, Norea, nor is faith enough for you. What you want is to feel the wind on your face, kisses on your lips, and sand slipping through your fingers. And you want sincere kisses and real sand and wind. That's it, isn't it? You don't want to be alive: you want to be truly alive."
I sat by the window and watched the lane breathe under the thin rain; the lamps pooled their patient circles of light, and the shutters clicked like slow teeth. It was a small, steady evening. Inside, someone set the table; outside, carts creaked on wet ruts. The house kept its habitual noises. A bell tinkled somewhere. Footsteps moved once, paused, and moved again. People did what people do. The day closed down.
You were there, shoulders hunched against the wet, holding something close. Your coat was damp at the collar. I remember the way you paused beneath the streetlight, as if testing whether you could still choose. You did not speak. You folded your hands into whatever you carried. The rain listened.
There were neighbors passing: a woman with a basket, a boy running to catch a dog. Their faces flashed and were gone. Some windows were bright; others were blank. I thought of all the small bindings that make a life—bread left to cool, a lamp trimmed, a quarrel forgiven—and how they gather around the quiet center of a home. You carried those things even as you moved away. The road took up your shape.
Later, inside, plates were cleared and the kettle boiled again; routines smoothed the night’s edges. Someone hummed; a child turned and slept. The house adjusted to the loss the way a wound readjusts to skin.
I told myself you would return. I told myself many things. But the rain kept coming, the lane kept glimmering, and the distance between houses grew. At last the lamps diminished, and you were only the memory of a coat moving down the road, a small sound swallowed by the rain.
https://forgottenlanguages-full.forgotte...m-aru.html
![[Image: nuam-aru.jpeg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/nuam-aru.jpeg)
Where the River Sleeps
Where are you going, carrying that small bundle as if the whole world were on your shoulders, moving quickly along the path while keeping your eyes fixed ahead, and yet you pause now and then to listen, feeling some strange tug at your heart, asking yourself whether you should continue, or turn back?
Yes, I saw you there in the dusk, alone. The little bag you carried seemed to tremble with each step, and the wind sighed. I wanted to call to you, to tell you the road ahead is long and heavy, but my voice stuck like a stone. Why do you hurry so? Come stop a while. The night wraps itself around the trees, and the river hums softly nearby. The road bends, and the lamplight falls in thin ribbons. People have come and gone along this same way. I thought of you and of the place you left, of the child’s laugh, of the old songs now rarely sung. And yet, you walked on without turning, your shoulders tight, your breath short, as if each step had to be earned, as if each memory was a weight you were carrying to throw into the dark; and then a voice inside you whispered, perhaps, stay, rest, do not go:
"You are born fragile, and you die fragile and weak. You are born blind, and you die with a lost gaze. But you are strong, very strong, if only you could learn to love yourself, Norea."
A slow wind blew, carrying the smell of wet earth, and you walked with your hands deep in your coat pockets. Outside, the village lay quiet, lights blinking behind frosted windows. The road curved, the trees leaning as if to eavesdrop, and the air tasted faintly of smoke. You moved on, step after step, your breath a white metronome in the dusk.
I remember that evening. Your small satchel swung at your side; you seemed neither hurried nor at rest. Once or twice you paused — looking toward the far fields, listening to some private memory — then continued as if obeying an impulse you had not named. A dog barked in the distance. Children’s laughter, ghostlike, drifted from a lane we had once walked together. For a moment I thought you might turn back, but you did not.
There were places you left behind: a narrow porch with a cracked lantern, an old woman who kept bread and stories in equal measure, a bench where two lovers carved their initials into the wood. You passed them all. Perhaps you were carrying something you could not put down, or perhaps you were simply learning how to walk away.
You stopped at the little bridge. Rain had made the stones gleam. Beneath, the stream whispered as if counting the years. You leaned on the rail and looked at the water—small bright fragments running toward somewhere the eye could not reach. Someone called a name; the sound folded into evening and vanished.
People had said many things about leaving: that it was brave, that it was selfish, that it was inevitable. You had heard them but kept your face steady. Inside you, I imagined, there were arguments and tenderness, grocery lists and old songs, the sudden sting of regret and the quieter pull of hope. They mingled and did not settle.
At last you walked on again. Your shadow led and lagged and then was swallowed by the road. I stayed where I was, feeling the cold at my throat. Later, the house would be quieter, the empty chair more plain. The world did not stop; it continued to fold itself into small ordinary kindnesses and small ordinary cruelties. Night closed. I shut the window and listened for your footsteps until they were only part of what had been.
The moon rose like a slow coin of light over the dark fields. Small sounds — a gate, a dog, the hollow clink of a distant cart — threaded through the quiet. People slept, burned oil, kept watch, and mended. Somewhere a lamp guttered; the wind touched the corners of the roofs. In the house the kettle sang, and a child turned in sleep as if chasing some bright, half-remembered thing. Outside, the lane held its old complaints and small mercies; footsteps went by and were gone.
At the threshold an old man stood and whispered to himself:
"Falling is a way of flying. It is the way those who have lost everything fly, everything except, of course, the ability to fall."
The wind moved low and steady across the fields, carrying the hush of late chores and the distant clink of tools. Lanterns floated like small islands in windows; someone patched a sleeve, someone mended a wheel. In houses, people breathed slow and ordinary lives—the kettle, a low murmur, a lullaby half-remembered. Outside, the lane kept its long small histories: footsteps, an argument softened, a greeting swallowed by night.
You walked on the lane where the grass bent, hands buried in your coat, and the world narrowed to the sound of your boots. At the crossroads a lamp swung and threw an anxious circle of light; you paused and looked down one way and then the other. There was a scent of smoke and something sweet—baked bread or the last fruit of summer—and for a moment memory made shadows into doors you might open. But you kept walking.
You passed the house with the crooked porch, the boy who had learned to whistle there long ago, the hedge where we used to hide apples. Faces blurred in windows; voices called and were answered with names that were no longer yours to answer. You felt the familiar tug—the small griefs and the small comforts braided together—and you threaded carefully around them like stepping stones.
Somewhere a cart creaked and a dog nosed at the ditch. Rain had turned the road to a darker ribbon; the air smelled of iron and hay. You moved faster. Your breath came in short, bright breaths. A child cried, and then stopped. A woman hummed as she set a plate down; the sound went on a little after you had passed.
I watched from a doorway, feeling the cold press my collar. Your shoulders were set as if against an invisible wind; your hands kept something closed inside. You did not look back. For a while I thought you might change your mind, might step into an alley or knock at the darkened gate. But the road took you.
There are moments when a town seems to hold its breath—when the ordinary weight of things presses down and everything small becomes loud. Tonight was one of them. The streetlight buzzed; a moth beat itself against the glass; a single window stayed bright longer than the rest. I thought of the long list of ordinary things that stitch a life together: bread, the smell of boots, the way a name can be both shelter and accusation. You carried those things with you, even as you left.
You went beyond the last lamp. The houses thinned; fields opened like a slow sea. The sky deepened and a few stars pricked cold holes through it. Your silhouette drew thin against the dark. When at last the road swallowed you and the night unmade your shape, I closed the door and felt the house remember the shape of your absence.
"You don't need certainty, Norea, nor is faith enough for you. What you want is to feel the wind on your face, kisses on your lips, and sand slipping through your fingers. And you want sincere kisses and real sand and wind. That's it, isn't it? You don't want to be alive: you want to be truly alive."
I sat by the window and watched the lane breathe under the thin rain; the lamps pooled their patient circles of light, and the shutters clicked like slow teeth. It was a small, steady evening. Inside, someone set the table; outside, carts creaked on wet ruts. The house kept its habitual noises. A bell tinkled somewhere. Footsteps moved once, paused, and moved again. People did what people do. The day closed down.
You were there, shoulders hunched against the wet, holding something close. Your coat was damp at the collar. I remember the way you paused beneath the streetlight, as if testing whether you could still choose. You did not speak. You folded your hands into whatever you carried. The rain listened.
There were neighbors passing: a woman with a basket, a boy running to catch a dog. Their faces flashed and were gone. Some windows were bright; others were blank. I thought of all the small bindings that make a life—bread left to cool, a lamp trimmed, a quarrel forgiven—and how they gather around the quiet center of a home. You carried those things even as you moved away. The road took up your shape.
Later, inside, plates were cleared and the kettle boiled again; routines smoothed the night’s edges. Someone hummed; a child turned and slept. The house adjusted to the loss the way a wound readjusts to skin.
I told myself you would return. I told myself many things. But the rain kept coming, the lane kept glimmering, and the distance between houses grew. At last the lamps diminished, and you were only the memory of a coat moving down the road, a small sound swallowed by the rain.



![[Image: dcon1.jpeg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/dcon1.jpeg)
![[Image: dcon2.jpeg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/dcon2.jpeg)
![[Image: dcon3.jpeg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/dcon3.jpeg)
![[Image: dcon4.jpeg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/dcon4.jpeg)

