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Three Drops from a Cauldron

Three Drops from a Cauldron

Tag Archives: Christianity

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

≈ 2 Comments

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

Margery Kempe by Jennifer A. McGowan

09 Saturday Apr 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Christianity, Jennifer A. McGowan, legend, mysticism, poem, poetry

Margery Kempe

You, creature, laughed at life,
rollicked in bed, gave birth to
fourteen children and a genre.

You yearned for less, knew the blackness of
the months post-partum, men’s lack
of care. Saved by your visions, you bought
your chastity, pacted with your husband
under the cross; changed your wide bed for
the uncertainty of foreign linens. Ecstatic pilgrim, your
tears were rivers that traversed continents.
You hit all the hotspots, bent knee to every saint,
insisted on your holiness. Creature, society doubted,
locked you up, but your heart strengthened in
solitude. Unfettered, unlettered, you bent men’s
fingers to the page, knew the value of your words.

How we read them, dream
of a heart beyond bearing.


*Highly Commended in Manchester Cathedral Competition 2015, and printed in their prize booklet.


Despite being certified as disabled at age 16, Jennifer A. McGowan has published poetry and prose prolifically on both sides of the Atlantic, including in The Rialto and Pank. She has been shortlisted for the Bridport Prize and been highly commended in many competitions. Jennifer’s chapbooks are available from Finishing Line Press; her first collection, The Weight of Coming Home, is from Indigo Dreams Publishing. Her website is http://www.jenniferamcgowan.com.

The Patients of Job by Mark J. Mitchell

03 Sunday Apr 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

biblical mythology, Christianity, Mark J. Mitchell, poem, poetry

The Patients of Job

Because they know suffering
but do not know how to suffer

they sit crouched in dust
beside their master with his sores and potsherd.

They were three old men, named,
and that young one who came and was named later.

They pretended to wisdom
but only so they might hear him speak.

Because he’s had the disease
and he knew it, intimate as a kiss.

Only his words could cure
because he alone had heard the freighted words:

and I only am escaped alone to tell thee.


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.

 

Mary Did Not Love the World Enough by Amy Kinsman

20 Sunday Mar 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Amy Kinsman, Christianity, faith, Holy Week, Mary, mothers, mythology, poem, poetry, women

Mary Did Not Love The World Enough

If you had sent me a sword,
I would have severed the heads of emperors
and hung them along the walls of Nazareth.
If you had sent me words,
I would have sat beneath the palms
and passed my judgement over each of them in turn.
If you had sent me a throne,
I would have whispered in the ears of kings
and fed each ragged beggar at their feet.

But you love us best of all upon our knees,
so I spread my thighs
and birthed him there onto the hay
between the cows,
their heads bowed with remembrance
of each calf that slipped, bloodied,
squalling, helpless,
from their bellies onto that same earth
where he first lay.

Do not think that my love for you was not
outstripped that day and each day since
in reckless abandonment of that first commandment.
Is this why
you take back that Son of God
as if he weren’t also Son of Mary
and I would not trade back their salvation
like pulling the nail from the writ on the gates of Heaven
with my own human hands?

You did not ask this of me
like you did not ask Isaac of Sarah.
It does not take a God
to know what our answers would have been.

Say Mary did not love the world enough.
I did not see you there at the foot of the cross
watching what was happening to our son
and listening to my prayers first to you,
then each and every demon by name
when they went unanswered.
Not even Lucifer had power to save him
but what I would have given
for a ram in the thicket that moment
he cried out for mercy.

If I could have slipped the sword
from the Roman’s belt
I would have rend their flesh.
If I could have summoned words
into my dry and screaming mouth
I would have called the wrath of Hell upon their heads.
If I could have sat at Pilate’s right hand
or by your seat in Heaven
I would have stayed this execution.

But you love us best of all upon our knees
and begging.


Amy Kinsman is a poet and playwright living in Sheffield, England. In her spare time, she is an editorial assistant at Three Drops From A Cauldron. Her work has previously appeared, or is forthcoming, in After The Pause, Glass Octopus, Pankhearst, Rust + Moth and Up The Staircase Quarterly. Find her online at https://www.facebook.com/amykinsmanwriter/

Historic Floods by Tim Dwyer

13 Sunday Mar 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Christianity, Easter, Holy Week, Lent, nature, poem, poetry, spring, Tim Dwyer

Historic Floods

Hudson Valley
Lent, 2010

I’ve never seen this creek
move with such speed
right before it lifts
and covers the road.
Tonight, the detour home
takes me through
remnants of Dutch hamlets
that held on to the language
longer than the rest.

With so many roads closed,
I drive in spirals.
When I emerge,
I will be uncertain
of time and place,
of what has been mended,
and what is left behind.

*
Holy Week, 2011

For days the brown river
has been rising above its banks.
Outside the prison,
through the bare woods
I see an animal path,
before the green of the leaves
will close down the woods
for months on end.

The tint of cream
in this Spring light
gently washes the road home.
This is Good Friday,
shadows grow long
as day approaches three o’clock.

These are the days
when one time and another time
come close as the breath
of a young mother and her first born.


Previously published in Skylight 47, 2013


Tim Dwyer’s recent book is: Smithy Of Our Longing: Poems From The Irish Diaspora (Lapwing Publications, 2015). His poems have appeared in journals including Boyne Berries, Cork Literary Review, The Stinging Fly and Stony Thursday Book. His parents were from East Galway and he currently lives in Stamford, Connecticut.

Modern Saints & Sinners With Their Attributes by Emma Simon

06 Sunday Mar 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

Catholicism, Christianity, contemporary, Emma Simon, feminism, myth, poem, poetry, saints, women

Modern Saints & Sinners With Their Attributes

It’s always the same, those double-D breasts
paraded on a plate before her, like risen loaves.
Who cares she’s now traded dishwater blonde highlights
for a BA (Hons) degree. They serve as exposition
on an ageing track-suit clad body,
sans silver bikini.

Martha’s no better: domestic deity transfigured
as clay-foot tax dodger. Her silver soup spoons
will jangle forever, like bells against the jailor’s key.
Weep your seasoned tears for her, a soul adrift
in a flood of kitchen accoutrements,
drowned by its own greedy torrents.

And our own 50-foot woman, Barbara.
Who can describe her awesome frame
without a mobile phone flung
in a lightening storm? The heartbeat too long
wait for thunderclap regrets. This once-seen flash,
blinding as camera bulbs, now shadows her every move.

Bask in the smile of Apollonia, that gold tooth
buying her a notch above other black-eyed rappers.
Not that she flashes it much these days,
with the divorce and law suits. And poor Ronnie
the likeness of her married lover imprinted
for eternity in stains left on her plus-size dress.

Even Katherine, cartwheeling on the lawn
of her good fortune can’t escape.
The spokes of her legs held up
as textbook exemplars, for all they kick
against a magisterial sky, its judgement hanging
like the vindictive sun.


Emma Simon has had poems published in a number of magazines, including Obsessed With Pipework, Bare Fiction and The Interpreter’s House. She was an active member of Jo Bell’s 52 project, and this year is one of the poets selected for the Arvon/Jerwood mentoring scheme. She lives in London where she also works as a freelance copywriter.

Prester John by Robert de Born

06 Sunday Dec 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Christianity, legend, mythical kingdoms, poem, poetry, Robert de Born

Prester John

There were witches in the wire
there were bubbles in the blood
the god of men and donkeys
was preparing for the flood
the gates were gilt with fire
pennies trampled in the mud
by sons of strays, unbroken bays
with saddles hard as wood.

King Karling saw the wreckage
and thought long, hard and good
to contemplate the breakage
of all he’d understood
a limerick his statecraft
the fate grafted on
to the presbyterian paradise
they’d once called Prester John’s.

The sparrows spat out charred tunes,
the fishwives spared the rod
from the back that bore dubloons
for the ass of men and god
who shivered at the comedown
numb now the cellars dried
extravagant at sundown,
forensically replied

‘find me a woman, brisk and proud
encircled by a brimstone cloud
with voice volcanic, iris wide,
go up to the mountainside
go above and find me one
to save the land of Prester John.’

full five they searched the slopes as vined
as hands are veined of harpists old
crowed, cracked, complained, resigned
and god grieved, castaway and cold
and knew the grim old slipping
with honey-dripping gestures
called to his old donkey
the venture’s last investor

and said, ‘old friend, I’m sorry,
it always ends like this
the thousand times I’ve tried
Rome, London, Atlantis; THIS
always is the outcome,
no matter how begun
and we must lie here you and I
dormant in the crimson sky
until the world is different
and men of gold are spun

but I really do regret this,
my thousandth sin and one.’

He grimaced with a needle,
autochthonic, in his hand
the donkey’s hair he plucked out,
strand by coarse strand,
and threaded out a blanket
warm as any cape devised
by tailors and magicians
in times of trading winds
loyalty and betrayal
were the padding and the down
and where the ruins clasp the earth
like a head’s cramped by a crown
a shivering donkey and a sleeping god
are waiting for a child’s smile
the brave, the best, the bright, the odd
to bring false hope and thereupon
rebuild the land of Prester John.


Robert de Born is a poet and musician. His work can be found online, in print, and scrunched up and thrown in the bin. He lives in Sheffield with his wife.

Morrigan Visits Hobby Lobby by Kate Holly-Clark

24 Saturday Oct 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

Christianity, goddess, Hobby Lobby, Irish myth, Kate Holly-Clark, Morrigan, poem, poetry, politics, religion, usa, witch

Morrigan Visits Hobby Lobby

That morning, they should
have paid attention to the woman
washing blood off the Lexus
in the parking lot.

The doors bang open to the conference room
with a gesture from Her long thin fingers
and walks inside with a wild wind
snatching at papers, swirling the toupees
but somehow not ruffling
a single feather of Her
long cloak of ravenblack.

did you think, She says
that I would not know what you are doing?

They all see stars; these godly men and women
for a moment, so bright and burning
their eyes water and
they find themselves in
the ribbon aisle.

She shakes one marble arm from the cloak
sweeps sideways with Her hand
a thousand cawing crows fill the air
the ribbons start slithering
and entwine their feet
with the fear of a teenage girl
caught between
the baby and the coat hanger

Did you think I would not know what you are doing to
My daughters and sons? She says

a rain of pink and yellow kitty buttons ping off their heads
each stinging pain
a mother struggling to feed two children
afraid a third
will starve them all

My daughters and sons and mothers and fathers
and nieces and nephews will not forget, says She

zebrastriped ottomans slam into them
with the blows to the gut
of endometriosis gone out of control
the bleeding endlessly into anemia
dizziness dropping them to their knees
cramps as if their guts are being drawn
and wrapped around trees

Sons of the hounds, She cries, COME HERE AND GET MEAT!

Finn MaCool and Herne sweep in at the head
of caroling, slavering gabrielhounds
and the wind’s roaring is so loud they think
their ears will explode and the crashing
of painted crystal and flower vases is
the continous roar of the ocean

they are cut with a thousand tiny shards of glass
their faces all scratches and tiny tears of blood streaming
puking up with fear
like 8 hours after Plan B
feet anchored to the floor with
layer after layer of Disney stickers
and terror of the Phantom Queen

My children choose, says She.
Not you. Not in My name
not in My dominion

not for My daughters and sons and mothers and fathers and lovers
not for My children and My non-children
they are Mine and you shall not interfere in My name
the battles they fight are Ours and sacred
no matter what they decide, My children are blessed

they can hear Her voice like dreadful bells
clear right through the hurricane
up under the suspended ceiling
the tiles rippling like an earthquake
dust and glitter swirling through the air
so thick the light is gray

She sweeps back Her cloak
both hands palms down
there is a silence that rings as loud as Her voice

the hounds and the heroes file neatly out the
automatic doors that crunch across
the broken glass

The Battle Crow eyes the board members
one by one with bright black eyes
stripping them down
to their profits and loss
their knees shaking
like they had worked eighteen hours
on an assembly line making wreaths and bows
for a dollar a day

Do not invoke god in your decisions for your fellow folk, She says
until you know Who will answer.

 

Kate Holly-Clark is a professional storyteller, artist, and poet living in NH.

Nephilim by Grant Tarbard

18 Sunday Oct 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

angel, Christianity, contemporary, Grant Tarbard, myth, Nephilim, poem, poetry, realism

Nephilim

The murdering angel, almost God’s law,
still washes with felt wine

Which he steals from the sewer grate
out the back of the subterranean Savoy hotel.

He applies the elixir with a wooden spoon
to the stumps of his sawn off wings.

Goosing disgust in a hoodie of contempt
with draggled, sorry hands:

His right is drowned in blue eyed matter,
his left agitates the puffy lips of an event horizon.

Unwelcome creature,
loveless embracer,

Waiting for the tranquility
of obscurity, lurking until nightfall.

The earthly woman he loves
is horrified in advance,

stealing the dark hours
from her shade until his fog emerges.

He blinds her with feathers which he’d saved
in a Sainsbury’s carrier bag,

He blows them with shaking hands,
all glitter and echoes.

Hush, hush, heaven is silent,
the brunet in his head turns to milk.

 

Grant Tarbard is widely published. His first pamphlet Yellow Wolf is out now from WK Press.

St Sebastian by Katherine Waudby

26 Saturday Sep 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

Christianity, Katherine Waudby, legend, poem, poetry, saints, St Sebastian

A poem inspired by the sculpture of St Sebastian by Claire Curneen

St Sebastian by Claire Curneen

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saint Sebastian

Transcending pain?
Whatever!
Open hands appease under
insolent shrug.
Where there’s no sense there’s no feeling.

Yet he strove to be so important, something
greater than can be deceived (to paraphrase the ontological)
noticed him, recognised his capacity
for turning mulish self-aggrandisement into virtue.
Something admired Sebastian’s conviction.

Taking pity on him
paradoxically,
He set Roman legions against him.
At the moment
the wounds poured forth,
wouldn’t it have been good
If he’d turned Sebastain’s blood to gold?

 

Katherine Waudby is a member of Jo Bell’s award winning 52 project. She has three poems on Clear Poetry in August. Her short stories have appeared on various web-zines such as The Beat and Cathy Galvin’s Word Factory. She is 53 and lives and teaches in The Peak District, Derbyshire.

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