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Three Drops from a Cauldron

Three Drops from a Cauldron

Monthly Archives: April 2016

Fairies by Hugh McMillan

30 Saturday Apr 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

Beltane, fairies, folklore, Hugh McMillan, myth, poem, poetry, spring

Fairies

The moon is a dull blade
and everything beyond
the pond of street lamp
is gone except two blue lights
swimming: maybe a house in the hills
or a 737 coming home to Glasgow,
or then again fairies.
It doesn’t look more
than half a mile,
worth the soaking
when I burst into the circle
and they slowly turn
their hard little faces to me
white and beautiful
in the light,
like dolls.


Hugh McMillan is a poet from South West Scotland, an award winner in several competitions including the Smith/Doorstep Pamphlet Prize, the Callum MacDonald Prize and the Cardiff International Poetry Competition. His Selected Poems were published by Luath Press in September 2015.

Old Perfume by Jade Kennedy

29 Friday Apr 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in flash fiction

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Tags

flash fiction, folklore, ghosts, Jade Kennedy, story

Old Perfume

My angel wears old shoes with thin laces that she ties loosely and a long skirt patched with multi-coloured fabric, rich in cotton. She has long curly hair and a hidden face. Draped in scarves and long sleeves, she is unashamedly and proudly gypsy as songs linger around her like old perfume.

Sitting at the edge of the bed, she watched me play games of reality and dreams. Like a game of chess, I dabbled in visions of black and white messages and spoke to the ghosts that still longed to be heard.

I decided she was real and watched her fasten her shoes, all the while fading in and out of life. I waved at her and as she waved back, she swore to me this was not my last day.


Jade Kennedy is a writer of poetry, prose, flash fiction and a collector of borrowed expressions. Her latest collection of poetry and flash fiction Alchemy is available from Amazon & Kobo etc. Her poetry has been included in various zines and she is now looking to find more homes for her flash fiction and prose. She writes a blog – ‘Borrowed Expressions’ at www.jadekennedywriter.blogspot.co.uk.

The Green Lady by Sammi Cox

27 Wednesday Apr 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in flash fiction

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Tags

flash fiction, forest, goddess, lore, myth, Sammi Cox, spring, story, summer

The Green Lady

Spring had come to the forest, placing its gentle, loving hand over branch, bough and leaf, a touch so stirring that it could wake any living thing from even the deepest of winter slumbers.

As the wood burst into life, guided and encouraged by the strengthening sun, the Green Lady also opened her eyes, eyes that captured the essence of the season. The bright green of new shoots. The bold yellow of daffodils. The soft pink and purple of sweet violets. Those spring eyes were to be found on a face of silver birch-bark, framed by a living mass of evergreen ivy tresses.

The year gained momentum and during the early days of spring she spent her time singing soft songs to the trees and forest flowers. But it wasn’t until summer dawned, when the air grew warmer and the days lengthened, that the Green Lady took to wandering the Wildwood.

She was in search of her other half; the vibrant, verdant being who had loved her since the beginning of time. They had parted company at the end of autumn, for they had responsibilities beyond themselves and each other to attend to before winter arrived in the wood. And though the winter was spent alone, it was filled with dreams and memories of an eons worth of summer’s love to keep the frozen breath of the dark months at bay.

With the sun shining brightly overhead and patches of clear blue sky to be glimpsed between the branches above, it was time for the Green Lady to leave her solitary abode and venture further into the forest. It was time to find her Green Man.

For many days she walked the secret paths of the Wildwood. She made her way beneath oak and ash boughs, beech and wych elm. She danced around willow trees and skipped over woodland streams. And everywhere she went she carried a song on her lips and a tune in her heart, her voice always accompanied by the sounds of the woodland, be it the whistling of the wind, the chatter of birds or the rustling of leaves.

It was whilst she was drinking fresh water from a spring which cascaded over an ancient rock face that she heard a familiar song on the air. She followed where it led, answering the distant verses with her own.

Day turned into night, and beneath a starry sky the song continued on through to the dawn. At first light, she was walking the hidden pathways of the forest, the sound of his voice the only directions she needed.

The morning waxed and waned and the song got louder. Midday came and went, and the afternoon grew older. With every step she took, the forest seemed more and more alive, and full of music and wonder. And still the song got louder.

He was so close now that the Green Lady could feel his presence all around her. Parting the leaves and branches of a low-growing tree on the edge of a clearing, she glimpsed the cracked and creviced bark-skin that she knew so well. And those eyes! Eyes the colour of honey and tree sap and the dark gold of ripened acorns.

She stepped through the foliage and entered the clearing, their songs joining into one. In the centre of the glade, in the light of the sun, their hands entwined. No words were needed. The song was enough. After all, the summer was their season.


Sammi Cox lives in the UK and spends her time writing and making things. She can be found scribbling short stories and poetry, often inspired by mythology and folklore, at: https://sammiscribbles.wordpress.com/

Elizabeth Starts Again with a Little Taste of Honey by Ion Corcos

24 Sunday Apr 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

Christianity, folklore, Ion Corcos, poem, poetry, witches, women

Elizabeth Starts Again With a Little Taste of Honey

She wears a slim dress over her bruise, changes her name
to Beth, reads the Bible over and over, to find the words of passion
ministers shout on Christian stations. There are lots of angry lines
that don’t inspire her. It makes her want to clean mould off the walls,
find a man called David, be on God’s side. But she doesn’t want war.

She goes to church on Sunday, her hair pulled out of her mind,
but walks out early, hearing the same thing. Later at the mall
she can’t hide her pain, limps along. Friends whisper she is a witch,
makes bad things happen. That she is with a good, moral man;
she wears too many colourful clothes, wants to climb mountains.

Tries to be herself, but it’s a small town. Even in the big city
she stands out. She races out of a pet shop after letting all the birds out;
doesn’t look behind. Not all fly away, but the ones that do follow her,
green and yellow bodies swoop in her wake, beautiful, like she is a queen.
She has left love behind, the stones that are still thrown at women.


Ion Corcos has been published in Axolotl, Bitterzoet, Every Writer and Ishaan Literary Review. He is a Pushcart Prize nominee. He is currently travelling indefinitely with his partner, Lisa. He is also working on his first poetry collection, Like Clouds, and a chapbook inspired by Greece. Ion’s website is ioncorcos.wordpress.com

17 Questions About the Sword and the Stone by Karen & Keith Eisenbrey

23 Saturday Apr 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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collaboration, experimental, Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, King Arthur, legend, poem, poetry

17 Questions About the Sword and the Stone

“So he took the sword by the handles, quickly and fiercely pulled it out of the stone, got his horse, and rode on his way . . .”
Le Morte d’Arthur

Were there kings before Arthur?
Wizards before Merlin?
Swords before Excalibur?
Stones before nameless Stone?
Did Stone ask to take Sword?
Did Stone ask to give Sword?
Did Sword enter Stone, or did Stone bring Sword forth?
Did King wrest Sword, or catch its birth?
Did Stone and Sword, spent, fall apart?
What boon did Stone hold back?
Was King known by Sword, or by Stone?
Was it balm or woe to let Sword go?
Does Stone dream Sword?
Does Sword dream Stone?
Did Stone split when Sword and King sundered?
Can Stone’s void be known?
Can Stone’s wound be healed?


Karen Eisenbrey is a novelist, singer, drummer, and reluctant poet. Her YA novel The Gospel According to St. Rage will be published by Pankhearst in 2016. Keith Eisenbrey is a composer, pianist, patterner, and accidental poet. Find links to scores and sounds at www.bannedrehearsal.org. Karen and Keith have sunk their roots in Seattle, WA and collaborate on many things, including an old house and two grown sons.

The Life Cycle of a Tooth Fairy by Andie Berryman

22 Friday Apr 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

Andie Berryman, childhood, fairies, folklore, life, poem, poetry, traditions

The life cycle of a tooth fairy

You think after twenty teeth
that tooth fairy is done with you?
On the day that you were born
the snowdrop, the tulip, the rose
bore a fairy,
your fairy,
some might say a guardian angel.
They learn just as you do.
Once you dispose of imagination,
drummed out of you by institutions,
the fairy is slumbering
until it feels passion.
That first person who broke you heart,
awoke the fairy.
When your brain went numb,
and your heart went cold-ish,
that was the fairy mending it.
When you felt pleasure at feeling nothing
when seeing the heartbreaker again,
that was the fairy’s reward.
The fairy sometimes takes a long time fixing things
as the brain and heart are intricate.
You feel your heart beating, your brain blurring,
that’s the fairy doing maintenance.
The fairy grows with you
and soon (with luck) you outgrow each other.
The fairy has taught you how to fix yourself
and so is obsolete to you
but not to the world.
From you, they have learned how to fix the fabric of the world,
and that is what they do.
Sewing, mending and rendering
the fabric of magic on which this world depends.


Andie Berryman believes that magical creatures are the same as us, always learning.

Her Confusion by Mark J. Mitchell

20 Wednesday Apr 2016

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fairy tales, Mark J. Mitchell, poem, poetry

Her Confusion

She was sure she’d dropped
through a trap door
in the fairy tale—
Both prince and witch
had fled the scene
leaving a sword
and a stepmother
to watch over
apple slices.

They’d all vanished.
Still, she kept
her knives sharpened.
She sat up
through slow blue nights
checking her blood-red lips
in a hand-held mirror
just in case
someone arrived
to wake her up.


Mark J. Mitchell studied writing at UC Santa Cruz. His work has appeared in the several anthologies and hundreds of periodicals. He has published three chapbooks, Three Visitors, Lent, 1999, and Artifacts and Relics, and a novel, Knight Prisoner. He lives in San Francisco with his wife Joan Juster.

Curious Street by Bernard Briggs

17 Sunday Apr 2016

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Bernard Briggs, legend, lore, market, poem, poetry

Curious Street

The baker
said he’d sourced special flour; from a remote Mongolian plateau
hand milled using tortoiseshell querns and mixed
with Ancient Egyptian yeast and camel water. The loaves were not baked
but aged in sulphur caves, for flavour, deep under his shop.
He gave me some to taste; a small cube from the counter display.

It did taste exceptional; the best bread I’ve ever eaten.
I bought two loaves.

The butcher
showed me a strange dark purple meat, twitching on tall hooks.
Reared in a valley, high in the Welsh hills, he said it was like beef…but better
was fed a specially fermented grass, that almost cooked the flesh from the inside
before its slaughter by druids. They used hermaphroditic singing knives
forged from Celtic snail ore, honed with quartz and unicorn oil.

I took home a small steak; fried it gently in butter.
It melted in my mouth.

The greengrocer
lead me through the back of his shop, into the garden
showed me a small plot filled with snoring blue pumpkins, on beds of straw.
He cut one loose, much to its surprise; told me
keep it out of the sunlight until I got home, then
roast it whole, rubbed with badger garlic until its skin split.

Later, in my kitchen I ate the whole thing
scooping the rich flesh with blue fingers.

The fishmonger
showed me Kelpies swimming in a glass fronted tank
hooked a small one that looked similar to a lobster and smiling plunged
it screaming into a pan of boiling sea. He said they were caught
in deep water just off the Banffshire coast, using traps made from Urchin webs
that he couldn’t sell them alive, as he had his reputation to think of.

I enjoyed the Kelpie for my supper
between two slices of Mongolian bread.


Bernard Briggs is a poet living in Aberdeen, North East Scotland. Originally from the South Coast of England, he moved to Scotland in 2003. He has had three collection published; ‘Love Cry and Wonder Why (2007), ‘A Hatching of Ghosts’ (2011) and ‘Headlines’ (2013). This piece, ‘Curious Street’ was originally written as a special exercise for the Aberdeenshire based writers group ‘The Apothecary Sessions’ of which he is a member.

Fairy Tale by Elisabeth Sennitt Clough

16 Saturday Apr 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Elisabeth Sennitt Clough, fairy tale, frog, poem, poetry, princess

Fairy Tale

For Nuala

I balance my golden tiara with the poise
of a Brocas woman carrying Irish linen
in a basket on her head. I have practiced
for days, pinned the shiny fabric of my dress
at the sides to prevent me from tripping,
pinked my cheeks until they sting
and the pores have opened like mouths
of small flowers where, night after night,
I have rubbed them and made them drink
a bar and a half of Carbolic Soap.

Oh, there you are, she says and I wait
for her to call me, Orlaith, beautiful.
But she snorts and says, you a princess? As if.

In the garden, I lean over the pond
and strain to see my reflection, as seepage
from the rubbish tip next door coats the water
from rim to centre, in glistening greige
that wobbles with the impact of my tiara
as it slips from my head. But a familiar voice
croaks, Princess, Princess, forget your tiara,
forget your mother. I will call you pretty
every day if you let me lay down with you
between your little silken sheets.


Elisabeth Sennitt Clough‘s poetic influences include Michael Ondaatje and Gary Soto. Her work has appeared in magazines such as Stand,The Rialto and Ink, Sweat & Tears. She has won prizes in several UK competitions, to include the most recent Cannon Sonnet or Not Competition. She now lives in Norfolk with her husband and three children, but spent many years living and working in places as diverse as Maastricht, Reykjavik, Jakarta, California and Florida. www.elisabethsennittclough.co.uk

I am not Cervantes by Ford Dagenham

15 Friday Apr 2016

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Tags

Don Quixote, experimental, Ford Dagenham, legend, poem, poetry

I am not Cervantes

am
i
a
Sancho Panza ?

+++ maybe herding
+++ maybe following
+++ the
earth’s quixotic delusion
++++++ waiting
++++++ on
++++++ some
++++++ concrete gift
i will
never
understand

or
am
i
a
saddled Rocinante ?

+++ lost in my own
+++ small
+++ windmill
+++ war


Ford Dagenham sweats balls. Runs the blog Hatchbacks on Fire. Feeds the cat. Has own mass. Today has sat in waiting for a hat in the post. Later he will send three chocolate Freddo bars to Surrey first class. Has chapbook A Canvey Island of the Mind by Blackheath Books. Turns up in PUSH and Paper&Ink magazines. Faced with dilemmas he often runs a bath. Today he will accidentally absorb news. Then run a bath.

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