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Death, The Intruder ©2003 Word Count: 1,700
The Black Plague, the curse of mankind in the medieval era posed many
questions. Was it a punishment by the Good Lord for the sins of man? Was
it a sign to his Chosen People to return to the Promised Land? Or was it
simply the filthy habits of the populace that polluted the land with the
offal of peace and wars; and spoiled its drinking water by the use of its
rivers and streams as the deposit of excrement and waste. Whatever the reason
fleas carried the germ and spread it by riding on its carriers, the rats.
Renaissance, the era in which man proficient in many fields of learning
and in the arts that had brought lasting offerings of inspired thought and
gifted work. Yet, it was the time of the great fever, the chronic fever,
and the lasting fever that spread its plaguey curse of the once fruitful
earth. The Black Plague had returned in its midst to the once good earth
bringing devastation in its wake. Drought and famine followed on the corruption
that ravaged the land bringing pestilence and the final last breath. ;"Behold
a pale horse, and its rider's name was Death!;"
The faithful cried out for deliverance for the evil that beset them, but
were unaware of the prophecies of the past. The Black Plague swept over
the lands and death to the many of the selected was the reward. Death was
said to have entered earth through sin, and since all men sin, the heirs
of Adam must pay the price.
The fateful writings of the prophets in the Good Book had warned by the
Word of the Lord that the world had been stored through the ages by the
evil sins of man, being kept until the day of judgment, ;"The wicked
shall be condemned;".* ;"The wicked shall be turned into Hell!**;"
The prophets warned that the retribution for not heeding the word of the
Lord the world would be punished; the heat of fire would cover it. The prophets
called out for repentance of the ungodly before the destructive end. Their
words went unheeded and Father Death rode his fiery steed through the land
following the toil of the Great Plague.
The priest and saints told the faithful that the world had been brought
out of by being supernatural forces of chaos; prayer will support these
forces and the curse of plague and pestilence will dissappear from the parched
earth. The good people believed in their words and knelt in devotion and
beseeched the most high. They cried out their dispair, the ripped their
garments and tore at the hair in the fierceness of their devotion. Yet,
their appeals went unanswered.
Then shamans and holy men were asked to recite incantations to stop the
'pyretos megas' the great heat that spread its curse throughout the land.
The cried out the words, ;"In the name of of all blessed ones that he
may uproot from the body the fever and sickness. I command earnest and solemnly
in the name of Abrasax!;" Yet these words were no barrier to the harvesting
of the Grim Reaper.
But, as they knelt and bowed their heads in humility, their prayers
were blocked by harsh rays of the 'shimsha, the burning sun, which cast
out the 'hermitariton', the great fever; it struck down without remorse
the a faithful companion, the newly born and growing young. Nobody was spared
the cold fingers of the plaque, from princes to paupers. The King of Death
reaped untiringly with his scythe leaving only a few sheaths to ripen.
Scapegoats were found and the accusing finger was pointed at them; the innocent
ones were depicted as bloated personifications of the devil incarnate that
carried the miseries of the Great Plague. They were the Chosen People accused
of poisoning wells, which fools thought that these innocent people brought
about the curse. The children of the faith were brought to burning stake
or to the road of expulsion. Father Death watched the stupidity of man to
his fellow man as he continued to reap his harvest.
The corteges rumbled over the dried packed earth under the 'shimsa' the
sun of the day. The flaming angel of the sun hovered over the cursed scene
mixed with priests chanting and mourners weeping. Lament was cried out and
continuing prayers beseeched the most high for the end of the surfeit of
seemingly endless suffering.
The following dark night reigned in its quietness. It spread its rule over
the final resting-places. It was the time of the gathering of the spiritual
world. One spirit after another arose from their earthly covering. One spirit
came from the grave blessed with an angelic statue; another phantom rose
from beneath a large ornate stone cross; a spirit emerged from a tomb marked
'The Lord is Mighty, the Lord is his name'; another shadow emerged from
a grave with simple stone slab. Then another and another arose from the
warmth of the earth. Slowly the burial sites were filled with the spirits
of the dead, all standing next to their final resting-place. The shadows
of the former sons and daughters covered in a shroud of mist.
Mumbling sounds were rumbled from their shadowy mouths that related untimely
demise in the time of the great sickness, the 'Ruah Ketiv' the bitter destruction
that turned the once living into a bountiful crop to be scythed by King
Death. ;"From King Death there is no escape, everyone, the righteous,
the sinful, returns to darkness and dissolution!;"
For everyone that lived under the heavy hand of drought and plague that
ravaged the land, there comes the end in time when King Death took a few
by the hand and said, ;"it is time to rest, you are tired, lie down
and sleep. For this sleep there is no fear, no care for the inflicted miseries.
The eternal slumber for the everlasting peace as it has no to-morrow.;"
The righteous ones asked, ;"Why were we chosen to die?;" They told
of their obedience to the words to the Good Book, their good deeds on the
warmth of the earth, their duty to family and kin,. Yet, they asked over
and over again, ;"why were we corrupted in death, to wander to that
place way yonder?;" Yet, for those there was no answer. The 'eshata
raba' the everlasting fever struck them down without any recourse to their
goodness in the living world.
The phantoms of the wicked, the ungrateful, the selfish, the philander,
stood alongside their ornate burial site, a symbol of their hypocricy. Their
shrouded figures bowed their wickedness to the inevitable. Death from the
ravages of diseased land was for them the everlasting punishment, visited
upon them for their disobedience to the Word, ingratitude to the blessing
of a fruitful life, or their sheer stupidity in all matters. But King Death
only told of the reason of their gathered souls in his eternal harvest,
;"It was the misfortune of the act of the damnation to the good earth
that had taken place, therefore you were unfortunate in the sloughing of
your skins to mere shadows!;"
King Death was there, the black clothed skeleton with is rusty but sharp
scythe; the curve of the blade reaped the souls of the departed. The presence
of King death could be heard in the sound of his rattling of his bones on
his skeletal frame. Those who waited till the last breath of life knew of
his coming through the tickling of grains in his hourglass; each grain falling
like moments of time. Together, the blessed and the damned looked and saw
the spectral image approach softly as the grains of sand ceased to flow...
and the reaped souls were taken from corrupt bodies and placed without solemn
rites in the black sack carried over his shoulder.
The Grim Reaper is an intruder whose appearance was seen in the past, felt
in the presence, and expected in the future; he was not there in the beginning,
but he made an early appearance. He came in error and then rattled his bones
over the dying. The shadow phantom chortled in delight as many with the
sin of Adam were mowed down like sheaves of grain. He watched in grimness
as pestilence swept barren the life of the damned.;"
The Black Death spreads its terror and its cold touch enveloped both the
weak and strong, the young and the old; the sweep of its damnation left
one homestead empty and another spared. King Death looked and led the ones
cursed to the house of darkness, to the dwelling of nothingness; to a house
from which he would enter but never goes forth. King Death transformed a
form from one mode to another, the reunion with the body to the earth, and
the soul with the eternal spirit.
Yet, plagues, drought and holocausts are a rich bounty looked with eagerness
by Father Death and his savants. Plentiful souls, damned by nature or man,
that are stilled, harvested in its richness, stored in darkness of hellish
sack and carried to the harrows of torment in the never world.
King Death's harvest is everlasting and every living creature that fell
to the sweep of his sickle never returns. He reaped with strength and patience
in the past and carries on in is his pace at the present, and will continue
in the coming future. Everything lingers for a moment and then hurries to
a mortal end. The plants and insects die at the end of a season, an animal
falls to prey, and man struggles on for a few years in time.
The cock of the crow cried out the rise of the sun, which brought a promise
of the renewal of life. The passage of time saw the falling of blessed rain
driving away the drought, from parched earth to bountiful harvest and the
cycle of life returned.
Yet, within the hidden shadows Father Death waits as he watches the sands
of time trickle in his glass. The Grim Reaper toils amoungst both the righteous
and wicked plucking a bountiful crop from the sons and daughter of man when
their appointed time has come.
Yet the wages of sin will be committed by the legions of evil and another
era of plaguey death either by the forces of nature or by the cruel hand
of man will come and his harvest will again be bountiful.
~The End~
Author Bio: Norman A. Rubin is
a former correspondent for the Continental News Service USA, now retired and
busy writing fiction in all genres.
Email
Norman A. Rubin
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