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Three Drops from a Cauldron

Three Drops from a Cauldron

Tag Archives: Jennifer A. McGowan

Creusa to Aeneas by Jennifer A. McGowan

14 Saturday May 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

greco-roman, Jennifer A. McGowan, mythology, poem, poetry

Creusa to Aeneas

My name is a bite and a hiss
in your ear. I walk with you
pace for pace, even when I
disappear. Through all your travels,
I follow. I whisper fire in
Dido’s ear, am the arms she
dies in. You may come to us
in the underworld, crush our Adonis-flowers
with your heavy feet, but we will
not respond. Why should we? You inspired
love, not loyalty; you are not
that much of a god. Hand in hand
she and I walk together,
shroud flickering to flame-red shroud.


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.

Cordelia in Prison by Jennifer A. McGowan

01 Sunday May 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

britain, Jennifer A. McGowan, legend, poem, poetry, women

Cordelia in Prison

She is left a moment. Footsteps recede.
She can hear nothing familiar—even
the voice of her father a corridor, a world
away has a foreign lilt, a wind
from a place she has never seen.

Silence. Then metal approaches, swing
by clank, and the key turns. The locks,
she notes, are well-oiled here, do not
protest. There are terse-faced men who nod
but do not speak; who slide the rope out hushingly.

She had always known it ends in death.
She tries not to choke or sob, but go
quietly, as in stories. It is difficult.
The men turn away. Is she offending, again,
by saying nothing? She rattles. Grows wings.


Commended in YorkMix 2015 and first printed on their website.


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 .

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.

Mortifications of the Flesh by Jennifer A. McGowan

30 Sunday Aug 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

Christianity, Jennifer A. McGowan, legend, Mary, mothers, myth, poem, poetry, retelling

Mortifications of the Flesh
after Colm Toíbín

Every mother has a crown of thorns.
Here is mine: my things of which I am ashamed.

++++++I could not teach him to admire his father.

++++++I could not keep him from arguing with his elders.

++++++As he got older, he adopted a fake posh accent.

++++++I did not like his friends, or understand them.

++++++I could not bear to hear them laughing after midnight.

++++++I could never make him wear his hair neatly.

There are a few more.
Like how I feared for my own life.
Like how I turned my face from him.
Even more, like when seeing his suffering
the soldiers paused, how I snapped.
++++++“If you’re going to do it, do it,” I said.
++++++“For the love of God. Here, you dropped a nail.”

 

*First published in Prole.

Jennifer A. McGowan obtained her PhD from the University of Wales. Despite being certified as disabled at age 16, she has published poetry and prose in many magazines and anthologies on both sides of the Atlantic, including The Rialto and The Connecticut Review. Her chapbooks are available from Finishing Line Press, and her first collection was published in June 2015 by Indigo Dreams Publishing. Her website can be found at http://www.jenniferamcgowan.com .

 

Love Like Salt by Jennifer A. McGowan

01 Saturday Aug 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

fairytales, family, folklore, Jennifer A. McGowan, parents, poem, poetry

Love Like Salt

A pearl sweats near poison.
A king holds a jewelled cup,
seated between the daughter who chose gold
and the one who would go bare for no man,
but the poison at the feast is subtle:
an empty chair and ancient guilt.

A servant brings the cook
to account for the tasteless meat.
The king almost sees,
but does not hesitate to blame.
The girl does not quail;
says, “Once you cast forth a child
because you thought she loved you less.”
He lowers his head, weeps.
She embraces him at last,
whispering his name,
knowing
she has made him
eat his words
and knowing nothing else
to rub in.

 

*first published on Enchanted Conversation and forthcoming in The Weight of Coming Home (Indigo Dreams, 2015)

 

Jennifer A. McGowan obtained her PhD from the University of Wales. Despite being certified as disabled at age 16, she has published poetry and prose in many magazines and anthologies on both sides of the Atlantic, including The Rialto and The Connecticut Review. Her chapbooks are available from Finishing Line Press, and her first collection is forthcoming from Indigo Dreams Publishing. Her website can be found at http://www.jenniferamcgowan.com.

Mary Magdalene Walks by Another Construction Site by Jennifer A. McGowan

11 Saturday Jul 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

Christianity, Jennifer A. McGowan, Mary Magdalene, patriarchy, poem, poetry, womanhood

Mary Magdalene Walks by Another Construction Site

The words between my legs
are not as dangerous as
the words you spout about them.

The gazes hanging from my chest
are not as controlling as
the eyes you keep in your head.

When my legs move, sway
hip to hip, I am not a metronome
measuring your pulses of desire.

Nor am I just slot B for your tab A,
japanned in wolf whistles and c’mere babys.
I long only for such flesh as my own,

so pray to that eternal male god
that he fold me into his nothingness
or grant me some small machinery of grace.

 

(first published in Prole)

Jennifer A. McGowan obtained her PhD from the University of Wales. Despite being certified as disabled at age 16, she has published poetry and prose in many magazines and anthologies on both sides of the Atlantic, including The Rialto and The Connecticut Review. Her chapbooks are available from Finishing Line Press, and her first collection is forthcoming from Indigo Dreams Publishing. Her website can be found at www.jenniferamcgowan.com.

Pythoness by Jennifer A. McGowan

26 Sunday Apr 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

goddesses, gods, Greek, Jennifer A. McGowan, mythology, poem, poetry, sisterhood, women

Pythoness

You never really get used to the taste
of laurel leaves, you know?
That hard green bitterness
which leads to ecstasy, divinity,
and a steady income.

The first time I sat on the tripod
suspended over the chthonic rift,
I said You must be joking.
Never so uncomfortable, and the cloying smell!
Now, said the elder,
you see why we rotate.

Years later, hair unbound
and eyes streaming—my first time in public.
In front of me, two bodies all scraped knees
and clasped hands, asking
How can we conceive? We all fall still,
listening for words.
I chew another wad. Eyes stare and hope.

And then I get it. You don’t
put your ear to the ground for a sun god.
We’re here to listen
for the roots Daphne sprouted
when she escaped, burrowing down to Persephone,
who understood. Their knowledge
cracks the earth, becoming steam
no male sky can carry.

This is our secret.

Another secret is that compassion can mingle with truth.
I look at the twining hands.
Words come.

 

First published in Acumen.

Jennifer A. McGowan obtained her PhD from the University of Wales. Despite being certified as disabled at age 16, she has published poetry and prose in many magazines and anthologies on both sides of the Atlantic, including The Rialto and The Connecticut Review. Her chapbooks are available from Finishing Line Press, and her first collection is forthcoming from Indigo Dreams Publishing. Her website can be found at http://www.jenniferamcgowan.com.

Tempus Fugue by Jennifer A. McGowan

05 Sunday Apr 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

Apollo, divination, Greek, Jennifer A. McGowan, mythology, oracle, poem, poetry, women

Tempus Fugue

It’s never wise to make love to a god.
I say love, as if
they understand the concept,
or anything except want and how to take.
Only worship, however perfunctory or bleary-eyed,
freely willed or surrendered, like a body,
appeases. You may find yourself reborn:
tree, river, star, what have you.
I’d say it’s a different sort of freedom,
this altered consciousness, this will
not to remember, if only
I could move. As it is
I’m stuck, a monument to desire.
Which isn’t bad, the flesh-on-flesh,
those twining arms, feet curled round about,
that catch of breath, the final dying sigh-
if it’s all you have. Most of us, however,
have mothers, brothers, lovers
it will be impossible to explain this to
after the last time. And so forth.
Gods alone exist in the vacuum
of self-definition. The rest of us
are defined by others’ eyes and expectations.
Saying that, I’m almost sure I had hands,
hair down to my bum, green eyes,
the works. Now
I’m not what they see. They come to me
with prayers and offerings, as if my scars
were holy, as if to touch something
that has touched the divine offers immunity.
Well guess what. You can pray all you want.
Just don’t expect an answer, or not
the one you were looking for. I don’t
remember faces, but yours will get you in trouble,
I’m willing to bet. You’re too fit, too ripe
for running. Which, incidentally, won’t work. I tried.
Not that I don’t envy you, with the wind in your hair.
I’d give it all, the alleged wisdom,
the blessings, all the blind prayers
to feel the sweet, aching warmth
of the earth beneath my toes again.
Instead of which
I have a half-life, half-death.
A sort of blank immortality;
part of a landscape without a face.

So I’ll outlast you. So what?
I have nothing
to measure myself by. Unlike
when I was a girl/nymph/woman,
when words like “season” had meaning.
When hours had weight. When life
had limits. When time
was the only answer there was.

 

First published in Life in Captivity (Finishing Line Press, 2011)

Jennifer A. McGowan obtained her PhD from the University of Wales. Despite being certified as disabled at age 16, she has published poetry and prose in many magazines and anthologies on both sides of the Atlantic, including The Rialto and The Connecticut Review. Her chapbooks are available from Finishing Line Press, and her first collection is forthcoming from Indigo Dreams Publishing. Her website can be found at http://www.jenniferamcgowan.com.

Io Takes Refuge in Upstate New York by Jennifer A. McGowan

14 Saturday Mar 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Greek, Io, Jennifer A. McGowan, mythology, poem, poetry

Io Takes Refuge in Upstate New York

Whiteout.
The sharp bass shock
of a loose shutter. The train whistle
of the eaves. Nesting, a quivering blackbird
in a draughty corner of an attic,
I dream of warmth.

I think this land is as far beyond gods
as a god’s lust is beyond reason.
Certainly the pale people here
take this apocalypse calmly, when at home
priests would sacrifice anything on four legs, maybe even slaves.
(Which I’ve not seen.) When dark fell
I saw no chariot
dragging the dark curtain of the night.

So maybe I’m safe. And yet
some shrill, small part of me
won’t let me sleep. I stare restless
into the storm while outside
the hard, bright snow describes the shape of the wind.

 

Jennifer A. McGowan obtained her PhD from the University of Wales. Despite being certified as disabled at age 16, she has published poetry and prose in many magazines and anthologies on both sides of the Atlantic, including The Rialto and The Connecticut Review. Her chapbooks are available from Finishing Line Press, and her first collection is forthcoming from Indigo Dreams Publishing. Her website can be found at http://www.jenniferamcgowan.com.

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

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