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Three Drops from a Cauldron

Three Drops from a Cauldron

Tag Archives: forest

The Green Lady by Sammi Cox

27 Wednesday Apr 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in flash fiction

≈ 1 Comment

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/

Wanton Agnes by Marc Woodward

16 Saturday Jan 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

britain, folklore, forest, legend, Marc Woodward, poem, poetry, the green children

Wanton Agnes

My glowing pink skin belies me
and I know that glint in your eye:
you’re hoping we might go to bed?
Would you feel the same
if I was pea-pod green instead?

Before the bang and the ringing bells
that chimed us from cave into sunlight:
that’s how I was - and my brother too.
Ah, yes, you know me now?
You’ve heard the gossiped news…

I’m Agnes, the green girl who lived:
I learned to forsake green beans
and to eat your garish food
then watch at the placid mill
as my skin took on your pig pink hue.

My homesick brother did the same
but his heart was always green.
Constant as malachite,
green as the willows
quivering by the wolf pits;

green as loyalty, green with memory,
green as the bright watermeal
that hides newts and frogs
but couldn’t conceal
his bloated pink corpse.

So take me to bed, perhaps make me your wife,
I’ll love you as any pink person might.
But you must know that when I hear
the high bells of St Edmund’s
tolling out bold and clear,

I’ll want to take the cold hand
of my brother’s colourless ghost
and walk where once a way appeared,
down by those lonely traps,
- that stranded us sun-struck and blinking, here.


This poem is based on the legend of The Green Children of Woolpit.


Marc Woodward is a poet and musician resident in the West Country and has been published in anthologies from Ravenshead Press, Forward Press, OWF, and various magazines and web sites including Ink Sweat & Tears and The Guardian Web pages.

The Wanweird by Kath Whitehead

12 Saturday Dec 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

children, comic verse, creatures, forest, Kath Whitehead, poem, poetry

The Wanweird

In the still and windy forest
On a straight and winding path,
The Wanweird takes its time
As it rushes past.

The Wanweird is attractive
In an ugly sort of way,
And he always stays inside
When he goes out to play.

His furry coat is very thick
Which helps to keep him cool,
He’s always very helpful
But is as stubborn as a mule.

Wanweird likes to be alone
Especially in a crowd,
His roar is very quiet
And he whispers very loud.

You will often hear him crying
With tears of joy and laughter,
He always goes before you,
But always gets there after.

The Wanweird is a creature
Who is bad when he is good.
He simply doesn’t understand
Why he’s so misunderstood!


Kath Whitehead writes poetry for both children and adult audiences, bringing to life the everyday in comic verse but never shying away from more emotive, heartbreaking subjects. She recently starred on The Poetry Show on Sheffield Live TV performing as Guest poet at Chesterfield ‘SpireWrites.’ Her train driver husband often bears the brunt of her wit, but we expect it won’t be long before we read about her new role as a first time Nan!

Corvus Activity by Anne Marie Butler

05 Saturday Sep 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Anne Marie Butler, corvid, crows, folklore, forest, poem, poetry, rooks

Corvus Activity

rooks scatter
black and leafless
through the ash wood

fat budded
twigs used for nesting;
the trees will grow feathers

plump and green
stacked up
like cushions

and come winter
the black ash wood
will fly away.

Anne Marie Butler is an artist and book illustrator who has been writing poetry for the past 5 years. She lives in the Preseli Hills in West Wales and attends and reads poetry ‘on mic ’ at local venues. She is currently studying Modern Literature with the Open University. Further details can be found at http://preselimountains.blogspot.co.uk.

Winter Landscape by Maurice Devitt

24 Friday Jul 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 1 Comment

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.

Green Man in Rocombe by Marc Woodward

17 Wednesday Jun 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

britain, folklore, forest, green man, Marc Woodward, myth, poem, poetry, woods

Green Man in Rocombe

I saw a Green Man fleetingly,
standing close by the farm shop barn.
The height of a tall hawthorn tree
in that instant - then he was gone.
For a bird song moment he stopped,
(as sliding morning vapour cleared
to wrap around the bramble tops),
then looked my way and disappeared.

Not wistful at the summer’s cease
the gentle closing of the year,
but smiling in a hat of leaves,
garlanded with rose-hip and sloe,
he vanished like a startled deer
or ermine on new winter snow.

 

Marc Woodward is a poet and musician resident in the West Country. He has been published in anthologies from Ravenshead Press, Forward Press, OWF, and in various magazines and web sites including Ink Sweat & Tears and The Guardian web pages.

Dryad by Seth Crook

14 Sunday Jun 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

dryad, forest, Greek, myth, poem, poetry, Seth Crook, trees

Dryad

This forest is the only church I have.
Nothing numinous is elsewhere.
Beyond these branches
I feel no shudder to the tap root.
Only simple fear.

Not here.

Look around, it is the twist of trees,
roots exposed,
everything slow dancing with the shadows.
Most of all it is the smell,
of death and life in one;
as though fall and rise are just two directions,
rot only a paradise for mushrooms.
There is nothing above the world, or below,
I know. But something huddled holy by the side.

 

Seth Crook taught philosophy at various universities before deciding to move to the Hebrides. His poems appear in recent editions of Envoi, Magma, Gutter, The Moth, Southlight, The Journal, Poetry Bus, Prole, New Writing Scotland, and on-line in such fine e-zines as Antiphon, Snakeskin, and Ink, Sweat and Tears.

Heartwood by Lee Prosser

22 Wednesday Apr 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

fairytale, folklore, forest, Lee Prosser, poem, poetry, witch

Heartwood

Gloom laden paths lay
Black tongues, black hearts
Caged within beech and birch
a cabin of bones awaited

The forest belongs to her each crow cried
Plants and life, suns and moons

As night slighted the dusk, she was waiting
Plans fell as leaves as she revealed:
Neither potions, nor spells but tinctures and salves
Beauty and radiance, flesh not bones

Stopped dead by a hush of her lips
Feeling her life as she pressed in, disarming
as I fell captive to her skin

How bright glows the night, when held tight as bark
An axe need not splinter, when given a key

 

Lee Prosser nestles himself in a West Wales village that avoided becoming a reservoir. He has had work accepted in Haiku Journal, Tanka Journal, Crowsfeet and in a forthcoming anthology by Forward Poetry. He regularly attends spoken word events in South and West Wales and is co-host and organiser of the Tin Plate Poets monthly music and spoken word event.

Three Drops from a Cauldron is a Three Drops Press publication.

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