Where the Rails Forgot to Run
When nature reclaims what man abandons, memories grow where iron once ruled

Once, a train passed through here.
Its whistle cut the silence of the woods,
and iron rails carved certainty into earth’s wild skin.
Passengers leaned into dreams as steel devoured distance,
never wondering if the forest minded.
But time,
that patient sculptor,
let silence gather where thunder once ran.
And trees those quiet rebels
grew not beside the tracks,
but through them.
Roots cracked iron like old promises.
Trunks wrapped the rails in slow defiance.
Leaves, like whispers, fell over memories
until the path forgot its purpose.
Now, the track holds no train
only stories.
Perhaps a man once stood here,
holding a letter he never sent.
Perhaps a girl waved goodbye,
not knowing it was forever.
Perhaps the forest, even then,
was listening.
And so it grew.
It swallowed the past
like grief buried under years of leaves.
If you stand here now,
listen.
Not for a train,
but for what the silence has learned to say.
For this is no longer a railway
It is a scar healed into a poem,
where nature wrote its final word
across man’s unfinished sentence.
About the Creator
Jawad Ali
Thank you for stepping into my world of words.
I write between silence and scream where truth cuts and beauty bleeds. My stories don’t soothe; they scorch, then heal.


Comments (1)
Amazing