The Men and Women were hungry. They would eat of those that walk
in Fur, Fin and Feather, and thank them for their sacrifice, but that was
not enough. They would eat of the wild fruits of the Earth, but that was
not enough, for all of these must be found, and hunted, and a home cannot
be built on this.
And the Sacred King saw, and thought upon it for a time, and His
face grew grave and sad.
And He spoke to the Lady, and said, "I must die."
And the Lady grieved for Her Lord, and He fell upon His Sword,
and died.
The Mother buried Him in the Earth, returning Him to Her Womb,
and mourned, and Winter wrapped the World in ice and snow.
She covered the face of the Sky with dark clouds, and Her Tears
of rain poured therefrom in cascades and torrents.
And the Tears of the Mother wetted the ground, and the Sun warmed
the ground, and a green shoot appeared, poking its head out from the Womb
of the Mother, and grew as the days grew, longer and taller, until the
golden hair of the Sacred King once more waved proudly in the wind; until
the Grain of the Fields stood, row upon row, as far as the eye could see;
until the Bounty of the Mother, the Sacred King Himself, stood upon the
World, ready to be harvested.
"That was well done," said the Mother, "But it pains me to see
you die."
"It is as it must be," He said, "And does it not show them that
Death is an illusion; is but another change in a MultiVerse of Change? It
feeds them, too, and this is a good thing."
"You are right," She sighed, "But I just wish it could have been
done in a kinder way."
"Maybe," He spoke, lowly, "But it is as it is nonetheless."
Thus it was, and so it is, and evermore shall be so!
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