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Three Drops from a Cauldron

Three Drops from a Cauldron

Monthly Archives: July 2015

Tourist Guide: How you can know for certain you’re in Zogairysk by Jane Røken

31 Friday Jul 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

Europe, folktales, Jane Røken, magic, poem, poetry

Tourist Guide: How you can know for certain you’re in Zogairysk

The bridge. The mist. Your hotel:
Electric Dragon Light House.

In the parking lot: an extinct truck
and a hawker’s barrow.

The landlady inspects you,
her tumbleweed eyes swarming,

suspicious because you speak
the language, but reassured

by that other language: dollar, euro.
Local coin is a dirty word.

The stairs and floorboards feel soft.
The night air smells so slow.

On the bedside table: a brand-new
Tarot deck, nothing else.

A thought, surely not your own,
breezes through the window:

You could actually stay here.
No one would ever know.

And all the trees in Brigadoon
turn over in their sleep.

 

Jane Røken lives in Denmark, on the interface between hedgerows and barley fields. She is fond of old tractors, garden sheds, scarecrows and other stuff that will ripen into something else. Her writings can be seen in many very different places, most recently Antiphon, Jellyfish Whispers, Lowestoft Chronicle, Snakeskin, and The Stare’s Nest.

Pigs by Fran Baillie

29 Wednesday Jul 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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fairytales, Fran Baillie, poem, poetry, three little pigs

Pigs

PIG PRICES ACROSS THE CONTINENT
SHOW A SEASONAL SLIDE
the morning paper shouted.

Imagine then, our chubby chums
on skates, tails tendrilling
out of piggie trousers,
piggie skirts,
tobogganing,
their trotters awave.

Wintering, the three glide; glide
across a frozen pond,
snort, guffaw and
relish their seasonal slide.
What price, a day of joy like this,
pre-abattoir.

*This poem was first published in GladRags.

Fran Baillie joined the M.Litt programme at Dundee University - a wonderful opportunity to practise writing! She has had work published by Prole, Lunar, Northwords Now, GladRag, Octavius, Dundee Writes and others, and was shortlisted for the Plough Prize and highly commended in the Wigtown Prize.

news: the lughnasadh 2015 anthology is here!

28 Tuesday Jul 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in News

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Tags

book, lughnasadh, poetry, print anthology

Released yesterday, 27 July 2015, I am very pleased to welcome the three drops from a cauldron lughnasadh 2015 paperback anthology into the world.

It can be purchased via Lulu here.

Thank you a hundred times to the 36 poets for agreeing to join me on the first print adventure, to Robert de Born for writing the beautiful introduction on poetry and myth, and to all the readers, submitters and supporters of this webzine.

 

The Coracle, the Fire and the Champion by Peter J. King

26 Sunday Jul 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

britain, folklore, legends, Peter J. King, poem, poetry, sequence

The Coracle, the Fire, and the Champion

1
for the stars of Fairyland,
haunted and pagan
++++++ for the stars (the
++++++ shadows of mythology)
+++ elemental earth and woods
+++ of primitive and obsolete diversity.

the dialects:
in many volumes (rich miscellanies of
everything preserved) containing
kind translations of the classics –
the Books of Britain, famous
for their thin, old prosody –
geography, important documents,
together speak to time.
in Wales, also, time scattered
history and manuscripts and
important purposes; revivals,
turmoil — after conquest their
remains lay ungathered.

2
three cycles:
++++++ the heroes of humanity
++++++++++++ (masks of gods) —
+++ +++ +++ semblance by fixed form.

++++++eternal changing —
++++++++++++this paradox figures
+++++++++usually in battles.

++++++divinities and their
++++++++++++earlier myth —
+++++++++ not of mortal end.

3
woods were ornaments;
gold and iron…
+++++++++ four persons of high standing
+++++++++ hurling against the steep
+++++++++ turns, scythes and
+++++++++ spokes and long hair
+++++++++ restrained by thin (and
+++++++++ deeply etched with writing)
+++++++++ fillets of iron and gold.

the wood province, one
stronghold, a parallel root…
to raise and strive, wild with
axes and sickles, each
without convention, each
dressed the same
+++++++++with round wicker
brooches — and winter,
+++++++++ devouring the stolen
champion of tradition,
+++++++++ now a god.

4
became so red with shrieking
that one hundred swans
heard and made cold, stormy
penance. profound
poetical, the people,
the first age’s fresh pride,
suffixing threefold destiny;
+++++++++ sculptors of glory,
+++++++++ beautiful salmon,
+++++++++ bearded warriors.
+++++++++++++++ strongest, wisest
+++++++++++++++ gentle and generous.
each spear the nine lands
forged, but his hands trembled,
refused to jump…
branch, thorn… cold iron,
running water, salt, and
the sound of a far-off
bell, tolling.

5
sons of gods,
vassals of iron,
oxen yoked to mountains;
they cleared and reaped day,
and the living world of images.
+++++++++++++++ temples
++++++++++++moulder, but
+++++++++the rustic god’s
++++++is a courted cult —
and some ruder race, the
aboriginal invaders of the
high mounds (their spiritual,
so-called “unsightly” names,
such as brownie, bogle)
belong to divine myth;
+++++++++the plain
+++++++++population of
++++++ the British woods.

6
+++++++++++++++ myths;
+++++++++ the common magic of the
+++++++++ lost tribe;
+++++++++ after years
+++++++++ the gods grant to days
+++++++++ a human horror
(as the disappearance of
Pryderi’s wife, of the cauldron
which became living sleep).
and his eye retained the night,
moonless, and three birds
mouthing invitation.

7
it slipped through another magic
which, in combat of night,
+++++++++++++++ shape-shifting and
++++++++++++ crow-eyed,
++++++ was stone witchcraft
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++ they say.
++++++ there was a far hill
++++++ where trees grew few but tall,
++++++ and the stars glare pierced
++++++ even the rare clouds,
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++ even the
++++++++++++ sun’s long noon. but
cold iron, running water,
salt, and the sound of a
far-off bell, tolling.

 

Peter J. King (born in Boston, Lincolnshire, England) was active on the London poetry scene in the 1970s, running Tapocketa Press, and co-founding words worth magazine with Alaric Sumner. In 1980 he took up philosophy, and is now Lecturer at Pembroke College and St Edmund Hall, Oxford. Returning intermittently to poetry, including translation from modern Greek in collaboration with Andrea Christofidou, he began seriously writing, publishing, and performing again in 2013.

Hansel & Gretel by David J Costello

25 Saturday Jul 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

childhood, David J. Costello, fairytales, growing up, hansel and gretel, poem, poetry, witches

Hansel & Gretel

The vast emptiness
of the unrecorded forest
slowly fills their eyes.

Lost feet unpick
densely threaded paths
re-weaving the strands
into familiar bewilderment.

Somewhere at its core
is a cottage made of cake
and a wicked woman
made of salt.

She is older than
the trees and the lost ways.
She persists like
forgotten fungus.

We have all seen
this cottage and
tasted its cake.

It grows children
into adults and
feeds their fears.

This place is thick
with the lies of parents.
We all rot from
our childhood out.

And witches do exist.
And they do eat children.
But only after they’ve
grown up.

 

 

*This poem first appeared in the author’s own collection Human Engineering (Thynks Publishing Ltd, 2013).

David J. Costello lives in Wallasey, Merseyside, England. He is a member of Chester Poets. David has been widely published on-line and in print including Prole, The Penny Dreadful, Shooter, Magma and Envoi. David is a previous winner of the Welsh International Poetry Competition. His debut pamphlet, “Human Engineering”, was published by Thynks Publishing in October 2013. A second pamphlet will appear in September 2016 from Red Squirrel Press.

Winter Landscape by Maurice Devitt

24 Friday Jul 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

cats, fairytale, folklore, forest, lake, magic, Maurice Devitt, poem, poetry, stories

Winter Landscape

She had just finished knitting
the cat when it escaped, black
fur shredded against
the driving snow. The night

was cold enough to make
a butcher shiver, hands
fingerless fitted snugly
into gloves. She grabbed

her coat but it resisted,
sleeves clinging desperately
to a hat-stand. The trail
of paw-prints was cold

and diverged in two directions
as though she had missed
a stitch. She rolled one set
into a ball and followed

the other into a forest, trees
huddled closer than their
shadows, branches stroking
beards of snow. She expected

a house, there was always
a house but no, a lake
the size of a mirror
and on the ice an empty bobbin.

 

The seventh son of a seventh son, Maurice Devitt was abandoned by his evil stepmother and raised in the forest by a poet.

Keratin by Kyle Cooper

22 Wednesday Jul 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

Kyle Cooper, myth, poem, poetry

Keratin

Once I got over the ex-lovers
Heaped at your foot –
All crumpled flesh and broken hearts,
Even those brightest smiles
And proudest stallions
Dying by the score to impress you –
I found I could see right through those walls
Like a glass mountain.

I killed lynx between us
Clawed hand over hand
To bring us closer.

Suddenly shrieks
And feathers and beaks
And the jealous eagle was on my back.
I cut off his feet,
Let his princely blood fall

And you were mine,
With talons in my hand,
Our first kiss was hard-mouthed
And predatory.

But the corpses below have woken,
Drinking blood, glass lying broken,
They begin their desperate climb again
And my skin feathers to keratin.

 

Kyle Cooper reads, writes, walks. He has recently completed a Masters in Literature and Modernity and has been scribbling for some years now. He has been published in The Cadaverine, Ink Sweat and Tears, and Brittle Star, and he reviews for Lunar Poetry.

Kelpie by Rebecca Gethin

19 Sunday Jul 2015

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Tags

Celtic, folklore, kelpie, legend, poem, poetry, Rebecca Gethin, Scotland, sea

Kelpie

Out of the rain a colt appeared on the shore –
he’d trotted through the bog on cupped hooves
that let him skim across suck and squelch.

In the sea’s dusk his eyes shone and the skin
inside his nostrils flared shell-pink -
he sniffed the air around me, stepped closer

and as he breathed out I smelled the seascape
from his lungs. Sensitive as raw mussel
he whiffled my hand. I stretched up

to stroke his neck and my fingers felt salt grains
in the fur. Wheeling above, gulls crackled
like bladder wrack. He turned towards

the water’s edge and seemed to beckon,
shaking out his weed-locked mane.
Waves ran over the herring flash of his hooves.

He bent down to snuffle his mouth in the water
and when he shook the drops from his lips
I knew his time had come.

 

(shortlisted in the Chagword Poetry Competition)

Rebecca Gethin lives on Dartmoor. Cinnamon Press published her second poetry collection, A Handful of Water, in 2013. Her first novel, Liar Dice, won the Cinnamon Press Novel Award, and her second, What the horses heard, was published in 2014. New poems have appeared in Prole, The Interpreter’s House and Lighthouse as well as Her Wings of Glass, the Exeter Poetry Festival anthology, the Battered Moons Competition pamphlet and The Broadsheet. Her website is www.rebeccagethin.wordpress.com

Snow White Slant by Maggie Mackay

18 Saturday Jul 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

fairytale, Maggie Mackay, poem, poetry, Snow White

Snow White Slant

Enter the huntsman in green,
mercenary greed-glint, dagger blink.
Snow White pants at his side
on the edge of gloaming woods.
He pull-pushes the blade
into beauty’s flesh, exits left.

Seven forest creatures face her
on a favourite path. Infatuated, baffled
they squeeze her into their crypt,
plant jewels upon her eyes,
and wreaths of wild flowers where birds rest.

The Queen twitches before the mirror,
brandishes her wand, witnesses her foe
more beautiful than ever,
immured in stone and alabaster pallor.

She is the fairest of them all. Her legs give way
as silk swishes to earth, felled by a mind-axe,
Frogs croak into princes, deer into the innocent.
Bears roar into songbirds.

The huntsman lives beyond human touch,
a hermit, gold forgotten.
No kiss to wake Snow White,
perfect beyond real life.

 

Maggie Mackay, a Scot with wanderlust, a love of jazz and a good malt, has published in All Write Then’s anthology Still Me…, winner of the Writers’ Circle Anthology Award 2014, and has work in various publications, Open Mouse, Ink, Sweat and Tears, Bare Fiction, The Interpreter’s House ,Obsessed with Pipework and The Lake, with work forthcoming in The Screech Owl. She is at Manchester Metropolitan University taking an MA in Poetry, and is a co-editor of Word Bohemia.

Familiars by Andrew Shields

17 Friday Jul 2015

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Andrew Shields, britain, england, folklore, legend, poem, poetry, witch hunt, witches, witchfinder general

Familiars

+++ after Keith Thomas

Witches worked
with birds and ferrets,
hornets and hares,
beetles and frogs,
moles and moths,
crickets and snakes,
crayfish and snails,
rats and toads,
blackbirds and crows,
wasps and flies,
spiders and mice.

Did Elizabeth in Manningtree
keep a whole menagerie?
Her interrogators found
a rabbit and a greyhound,
a white dog and a polecat
and a toad (but not a bat).

A witch was powerless
when she heard Hopkins hiss.
She must burn,
said Sterne.

 

Andrew Shields lives in Basel, Switzerland. His book Thomas Hardy Listens to Louis Armstrong is being published by Eyewear in June 2015.

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