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Three Drops from a Cauldron

Three Drops from a Cauldron

Tag Archives: feminism

The Derry Street Trials by Emma Simon

25 Friday Mar 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Emma Simon, feminism, folklore, poem, poetry, witches, women

The Derry Street Trials

If she crooks a knowing smile your way
to draw out thoughts that itch within
then she’s a witch.

Scrutinise her dress. If it’s raggedy,
hem unstitched or wanton split too high,
then she’s a witch.

If you can see the bones of her
a jut of question marks, a lack of marrow,
then she’s a skinny witch.

They are the worst. Though many shape shift
disguise their witchy forms
in outsize black and formless grey

roll malicious intent, year after year
in thick fat, like the truffling pigs
they want to turn you into.

If you see such figures in the tented dark
laughing at the night while gathering its riches,
beware. They’re all likely witches.

Mark her hair, if there are silver streaks
- known as devil’s moonshine - it’s a sure sign
she’s an accomplished witch.

If she has no children. Or too many.
Leaves them a-bed while she slips out
to conjure coins from the beamy air,

or stays at home, bricked behind her walls
without a man to breathe life in her fire,
then she’s a witch

or as good as, by any rational reckoning.
Watch her by the water,
how she skirts the millpond.


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.

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.

Princesses: Where are they now? (Part six: Aladdin / Jasmine) by Sarah Thomasin

27 Saturday Feb 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in flash fiction

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Tags

Aladdin, asexuality, fairy tales, feminism, flash fiction, happy endings, legends, polyamory, Princess Jasmine, Sarah Thomasin, series, trauma

CN: sexual abuse referenced in this flash fiction

Princesses: Where are they now?
(Part six: Aladdin / Jasmine)

She was 12 the first time Jafar tried to force her father into betrothing her to him, and though she knew well enough it was power he was after, the way he looked at her: mocking, arrogant, acquisitive, made her want to scrub her skin raw. By the time she was 15 she’d felt more than his eyes on her body. She tried not to be alone in the palace, got out when she could. That’s where she met him. A boy almost her own age who saw her as a companion, not a possession. No wonder she’d been smitten.

She wonders now if she didn’t move too fast. An irrational fear that Jafar might somehow come back had made her keen to marry, to be off the market. When the infatuation wore off, she realised all she wanted from Aladdin was friendship.

Their sex life foundered early. It was hard for her to relax, to trust. Flashbacks left her sobbing in his arms. To his credit he was patient, hid his frustration. Tried not to pressure her.

Now he’s Sultan, he’s taken a second wife, Arzoo, a sweet, light-eyed girl with a sex drive that matches his. She’s happy for them both, and enjoys their closeness. Sometimes they snuggle, all three together, and read stories, eat sweetmeats and laugh all night. Other nights she curls up alone in her chamber, happy knowing they’ll keep each other entertained till dawn. She loves them both a lot.

Arzoo is filling out, she’s noticed lately. She hopes the baby will be a little girl. She knows Aladdin always wanted a daughter. And if it is, Jasmine will keep her safe, make sure she always has a refuge in her second mother’s chamber.

She won’t let anyone harm a hair on her head.


Sarah Thomasin is a performance poet living in Sheffield. As well as saying poems out loud at every opportunity, they have had poems published in Now Then magazine, and in two English Pen collections, three Pankhearst Slim Volume anthologies (No Love Lost, Wherever You Roam, and This Body I Live In), The Sheffield Anthology (poems from the city imagined) and Poems For the Queer Revolution. They were also commissioned to create a limerick quiz about gender which appears in Kate Bornstein’s My New Gender Workbook. You can find Sarah online at www.sarahthomasin.com.

Princesses: Where are they now? (Part four: The Little Mermaid) by Sarah Thomasin

13 Saturday Feb 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in flash fiction

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Tags

disney, fairy tale, feminism, flash fiction, hans christian andersen, pregnancy, princesses, reimagining, Sarah Thomasin, series, speculative

Princesses: Where are they now?
(Part four: The Little Mermaid)

Ariel has now spent more of her time on land than she ever did as a mermaid. Even swimming with what her relatives see as her strange bifurcated tail hardly seems strange anymore. She does think of the speed and power she had as a mermaid. She can barely hold her breath more than a minute now, and her gills closed up long since. She knows her sisters still shake their heads and sigh over her – why would anyone choose a life like that? Choose to change their body, at such great risk? Especially anyone with the great good fortune to be born a princess of the sea! She can’t explain to them that she always knew where she belonged.

As queen, Ariel has made it her business to ensure her human subjects all know how to swim. She visits all the schools regularly to impress the basics of water safety on classes full of chattering children. Her own son, to his grandparents’ relief, takes after the leggy side of the family. (Although she was delighted to find, behind his little ears, tiny gill flaps.) Sebastian – named for a long dead friend – regularly swims down to visit his mother’s family. And though the mermaids laugh and tug his feet, he keeps on going back. Ariel knows the feeling of being in the wrong element. She’s ready to let Sebastian leave the land forever. But as the heir to the throne, she knows there’ll be a row with his father. She finds herself wondering if it’s not too late: another heir would solve the problem.

But oh! How she wishes she could still spawn like her mother had! Human pregnancy was not something she’d factored in. Mind you, for her husband, she’d still go through worse.


Sarah Thomasin is a performance poet living in Sheffield. As well as saying poems out loud at every opportunity, they have had poems published in Now Then magazine, and in two English Pen collections, three Pankhearst Slim Volume anthologies (No Love Lost, Wherever You Roam, and This Body I Live In), The Sheffield Anthology (poems from the city imagined) and Poems For the Queer Revolution. They were also commissioned to create a limerick quiz about gender which appears in Kate Bornstein’s My New Gender Workbook. You can find Sarah online at www.sarahthomasin.com.

Gretel’s Tale by Kay Buckley

07 Sunday Feb 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

fairytale, feminism, Kay Buckley, poem, poetry, reimagining, retelling, women

Gretel’s Tale

I get that food dead feeling
and the plastic cold pocket opens.

I try to find the breaded path as my tongue
scratches across gritted greased lips.

Feeding my sliced thoughts and breaking
the shape of my body I remember:

how she stirred the earth’s chocolate richness,
how she spooned clouds into choux swans.

Body born, body proud and warming in the sun
she ladled caramel to set her biscuit bricks.

She fed me in food and love.
She ate me anew in joy and hope.

Every day I went to Hansel in his cage,
as her rounded hips danced around the copse.

He called her; “she, the other, and anti-mother.”
What else could I do? What else could I say?

After all what are little girls made of?
I was sugar and spice – a good girl, nice.

I followed the mould.
I wanted a man so I killed the bitch.

Fashion took its victim and beauty snared his chains.
Always the eternal feminine should hate the fat witch.

My cage was built on high heels and diet meals,
with candyfloss nails and legs like rails.

I became good enough for a man to eat.
So he ate me, he hated me and then I hated me.

Until I broke the scale and his image.
I rescued the apple from Eve’s guilt

and spoke not sin or greed, but Gretel’s Tale.


Kay Buckley lives in Barnsley. She was overall winner of the 2014 York Mix poetry competition. Her poems have been published in magazines such as Antiphon, Butcher’s Dog, Brittle Star and Proletarian Poetry as well as included in anthologies by Paper Swans Press, Pankhearst Press and The Emma Press.

Reliquary Apple by Michèle Brenton

05 Friday Feb 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Eve, feminism, goddesses, Michele Brenton, misogyny, mythology, poem, poetry, women

Reliquary Apple

It’s all my fault.
That’s what they say,
have been saying for as long as the myths of man
trickled into the ears
of those who found it
useful.

The temptress leading all to sin
with her lack of control
and sensuous ways
slinking about
like a snake.
Interesting…

It’s rubbish of course.
The truth I know
is something strained through
muslin gauze,
treacle-sweet
to make you sick
if you swallow
much of it.

I am the keeper of the hearth,
I am the maker of new life,
I am the warrior who defends,
I am the home at journey’s end.

Gild me however you may choose
deny my core
and we all lose.


Michele Brenton was born exactly 47 years after Dylan Thomas within a few hundred feet of the exact spot he was born. As @banana_the_poet she was voted the most popular human poet by the Twitter community in the Shorty Awards 2011. She writes poetry and is delighted, surprised and honoured each time her work is included in a publication. It happened first in 2001.

Michele Brenton’s Amazon Author Page

Michèle Brenton’s Poetry Page on Facebook

rapunzel, rapunzel, what’s your strategy for long-term growth? by Anne Mild

29 Friday Jan 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Anne Mild, fairy tales, feminism, poem, poetry, princesses, reimagining, retelling

rapunzel, rapunzel, what’s your strategy for long-term growth

I wondered for so long
where you were,
what was taking so long,
if you were even coming
at all.

Finally
I cut my own hair
and climbed down
by myself.

Now I am a
small business owner
I do my own taxes
and I am seeing a wonderful man
who couldn’t be further from a prince.


 

Anne Mild is a twenty-something student with too many notebooks and not enough quiet. She likes alpacas, her pug, and space. In her spare time she works towards earning a graduate degree in History and making the perfect soup.

Princesses: Where Are They Now? (Part One: Snow White) by Sarah Thomasin

23 Saturday Jan 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in flash fiction

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

age, fairy tales, feminism, flash fiction, princesses, prose, reimagined, Sarah Thomasin, series, Snow White, speculative, story, women

Princesses: Where are they now?
(Part One: Snow White)

People often mistake her name for a reference to her hair, these days. When she tells them no, that was the name she was born with, and strokes her tanned, wrinkled, liver spotted cheek, murmuring “white as snow” the nurses smile fondly at each other. Her lips are still bright red though, the lipstick applied with a shaky hand. They call her obstinate. The prince – the king – died years ago. He was a few years older when they married, but that sort of thing didn’t raise eyebrows, in those days. Still, she’d have liked to stay with the dwarves. The closest to parents that she ever knew, truth be told. Although she never really let them nurture her – she never really knew how. Letting yourself be loved wasn’t a skill she’d needed. They would have loved her like a daughter though, if she’d let them, and that meant a lot. Sometimes she catches herself in the mirror (an old heirloom): gaunt face, dark ringed eyes, a slash of crimson, and starts, seeing her stepmother again. She wonders, vaguely, if life is really fair to widowed queens.


Sarah Thomasin is a performance poet living in Sheffield. As well as saying poems out loud at every opportunity, they have had poems published in Now Then magazine, and in two English Pen collections, three Pankhearst Slim Volume anthologies (No Love Lost, Wherever You Roam, and This Body I Live In), The Sheffield Anthology (poems from the city imagined) and Poems For the Queer Revolution. They were also commissioned to create a limerick quiz about gender which appears in Kate Bornstein’s My New Gender Workbook. You can find Sarah online at www.sarahthomasin.com.

The Other Fey Folk by Kate Holly-Clark

07 Saturday Nov 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

faeries, fairies, fairy, feminism, folklore, Kate Holly-Clark, poem, poetry, story, Tinkerbell, women

The Other Fey Folk

So.
Mab and Titania have come back
again
sweeping their long robes
and long hair
regally through the halls
of imagination—
And Oberon and Nuada
battle through the dreaming nation
Nimue dances again by
the shore,
and Bluebell and Tansy
gossip once more,
dreaming lazily through the summer’s
sunny afternoons
and the little folk are
collecting milk and hiding
car keys as well
and have completely eclipsed
poor Tinkerbelle.

Her hair and her skirts
too short and too cute
her story too kind
for the goth-dreaming youth
her socks are not stripy,
she carries a wand
and somehow when Mab
blew back into town
she convinced folks
they were beyond
the simple story, the empty shell
made of Barrie’s Tinkerbelle.

The Lady of the Lake
now ventures up upon the land
and dances with the dryads
to the latest hip fey-folk
band and over in the corner
unasked, undancing, ignored for
her bright and childlike cheer
left without so much
as a randy satyr’s wink…
poor Tink.

The naiads are weaving lilies
into each other’s hair,
giggling over sailors and pretending
Tinkerbelle
isn’t even there.
The twelve year old sister
stuck at the prom—
her hair is too short
and her dress isn’t long
and embroidered
with the latest in Celtic-Brown
design
Unfashionable and childish and left
once more behind.
The willow-girl is whispering and
casting sideways glances
and the music grows more wild
and dark in the dancing
dell.

Poor Tinkerbelle.
Her wand grows dim, her light
grows faint. Her every move
a pain and trial.

Tinkerbelle. Out of style.
Except for those of us who can
be six again,
and love her for her bravery
and her cheer,
and her little singing voice, and her
curls in a short cap—
for her unfashionable dress
and her wand, so cliche—
I won’t ask that you believe
in fairies.
Just Tinkerbelle.
And clap.
Just for today.

 

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

Guest Post: Rhiannon Thorne interviews Christine Heppermann

06 Tuesday Oct 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in Book Reviews, Interviews

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Christine Heppermann, fairytales, feminism, girls, guest post, interview, poetry, Rhiannon Thorne, women, YA collection

Recently I was lucky enough to have Christine Heppermann respond to my interview query about her Poisoned Apples: Poems for You, My Pretty, which I had the good fortune of receiving as a part of a prize lot of books. Her first YA poetry book, Poisoned Apples is sardonic, sassy, feminist, and charming. Beautifully printed, each poem is paired with a black and white photo or photo manipulation. Continue reading →

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