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Three Drops from a Cauldron

Three Drops from a Cauldron

Tag Archives: witch

Amethyst by Sarah Miller

20 Wednesday Jan 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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crone, folklore, magic, poem, poetry, Sarah Miller, wise woman, witch, women

Amethyst

Flickering
fire haired
wise woman
witch layered
mist throated
moss coated
body a mulch
of wet pine,
dragon’s blood
and good motives.
Drums a primal rhythm
jingles a silver bell
draws cauldrons of old magick
from a deep chalice well
her words curl
like sweet smoke
from a burning incense stick
using herbs and affirmations
to honour life and heal the sick
circle dancer, truth seeker
crow lady, neighbour freaker,
tarot caster, future peaker
down to earth, plain speaker
A crone who’s watched the wheel turn
who doesn’t miss a chance
to follow the path,
embrace the craft
and dance the spiral dance.


Sarah Miller is a poet, playwright and theatre deviser living in Salford. Selkie Singing At The Passing Place, her joint poetry collection with Melanie Rees, was recently published by Flapjack Press.

Wizard Stick by Paul Tristram

19 Saturday Dec 2015

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legend, magic, myth, Paul Tristram, poem, poetry, witch, wizard

Wizard Stick

It is his eyes which unnerve you the most.
The pots and jars of powders and potions
shelving the walls of his hermitage,
the cauldron smouldering herbally away,
perched in the amber, shadowed hearth
and the broomstick which he sweeps
the entrance with on a New Moon
lose most of their surprise and curiosity
after brief acknowledgement and familiarity.
But his eyes, piercingly intense, dancingly alive,
not filled with any malice or ill intent,
it’s the focus and power to transparent you through.
That, and the Staff, never more than three foot
(A magic number!) away from his beckoning hand,
with its raven feathers, dangling owl claw,
Peridot head and burnt runes spiralling its surface
are enough to question whether the questions
you have brought, tied up in your throat are
really the things in your life Witch need answering?

 

Paul Tristram is a Welsh writer who has poems, short stories, sketches and photography published in many publications around the world, he yearns to tattoo porcelain bridesmaids instead of digging empty graves for innocence at midnight, this too may pass, yet. Buy his book ‘Poetry From The Nearest Barstool’ at http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1326241036 And also read his poems and stories here! http://paultristram.blogspot.co.uk/

Baba Yaga by Ashley Parker Owens

28 Wednesday Oct 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

Ashley Parker Owens, Baba Yaga, fairytale, folklore, forests, poem, poetry, Russian, witch

Baba Yaga

Baba Yaga is the devil’s grandmother,
suggesting she was a mother once.
She flies through the air
in a mortar & pestle,
& sweeps away footsteps
with a silver birch broom.

Her hut deep in the forest
stands on giant chicken legs,
with no windows,
sometimes not even a door.

The fence is made of human bones with skulls on top,
& visitors are granted entrance with the magical phrase:

Turn your back to the forest
your front to me

Baba Yaga is not good,
but is not entirely evil.
She is not a good mixer or easy-going.
She kidnaps children & threatens to eat them,
& provides wrong information to strangers
unlucky enough to lose their way.

Baba Yaga knows something about women:
they are desperate to learn the secret
of turning wrinkles smooth.
She knows a recipe,
but to ask her aid requires
preparation & purity of spirit
& a dollop of basic politeness.

She ages one year per question,
& is reluctant to help.
Aging reverses with a blend
of tea steeped with blue roses,
& the chant:

Turn your back to the forest
your front to me

 

(An earlier version of this poem was posted on Accents Publishing Blog as part of #lexpomo. http://www.accents-publishing.com/blog/2015/06/15/baba-yaga)

Ashley Parker Owens lives in the hills of Kentucky, where the gnomes are. She has lived in San Francisco in an ashram, and in Chicago where she helped with the Second Underground Press Conference and was the creator and editor of Global Mail. After the successful publication of Gnome Harvest by Double Dragon Publishing, Ashley is writing the next novels in the Gnome Stories Series. She has an MFA in Creative Writing at Eastern Kentucky University, and an MFA from Rutgers University in Visual Arts.

Morrigan Visits Hobby Lobby by Kate Holly-Clark

24 Saturday Oct 2015

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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.

Baba Yaga by Johnny Giles

12 Friday Jun 2015

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Baba Yaga, fairytale, folklore, Johnny Giles, magic, poem, poetry, Russian, witch

Baba Yaga

The dacha dashing on chicken stilts
There’s something ill in the cauldron swilled
In the Mother’s mill, the grind and tilt
Of the Autumn’s drill, its witchcraft will
Distilled into bitter pills that trill

Baba yaga, baba baba yaga yaga
Baba baba, yaga yaga yaga baba
Baba yaga, baba baba yaga yaga
Baba baba, yaga yaga yaga baba

Feathered floorboards
Crack and creak
In the grains of Baba’s beak
Yaga soars in the chords
of Russian lore So to speak

Weathered weeks
In Yaga cheeks
Baba Baba’s
Baa black sheep. Her pester pestle
And morbid mortar
She ‘Bony Leg’ who helps or hinders
Whoever in the forest lingers

Many facets
Crooked fingers
Magic in their
Aged aspects
The era
Of Baba and Yaga
Footsteps so Slavic and Saga

 

Johnny Giles is one of Wales’s youngest published poets (Chalk Outlines, Blackheath Books, 2014). His work has been called “ace” (Ben Mellor), “insightful” (Jonzi D), and “really beautiful to listen to” (Hollie McNish). He lives in Cardiff, and is 22 years old.

Heartwood by Lee Prosser

22 Wednesday Apr 2015

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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.

Canrig Bwt by David J. Costello

10 Friday Apr 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

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Tags

David J. Costello, folklore, hero, horror, legend, poem, poetry, Wales, witch

Canrig Bwt

It was raining when I started out.
A thousand years of weathered pebbles
glazing into stars beneath my luminescent feet
that friction polished to a backward slip.
If I came down the other way
the path would hurry me along.
But not towards the bridge.
Towards the witch.

It took a while to get the sword just right.
Balance its weight.
Compensate.
A full-grown man could wear it on his belt,
but every step I took it shocked an iron anthem from the rock,
and sent the struck path bolting for the overhang.

I’d waited for the new moon.
Thought I’d chosen well.
Sheathed myself in its dull dissolve.
Half-drawn. Fist-tight.

Nothing living passed that way.
Just her.
No birds above.
No sheep grazing sparse grass.
Only a tremulous stream busy with burial.

A slew of small bones littered the path.
A gatepost cupped the crown of a child’s skull
like a begging bowl,
a long gold lock, limp with damp,
tugging its sinewy hinge.

The unused bridge stood square.
The altar stone beyond,
the cromlech, angular and clear
against the moon-sick mountains.

I braced myself across its span
and spoke her name.

 

*Canrig Bwt was a Welsh Witch said to have lived in the pass above Llanberis. The bridge and Cromlech referred to are there to this day. There are many versions, this poem references the young farm boy out to avenge his sister’s demise.

David J. Costello lives in Wallasey, Merseyside. He is a member of Chester Poets. David has been widely published on-line and in print including Prole, The Lake, Magma and Envoi. David is a previous winner of the Welsh International Poetry Competition. His debut pamphlet, Human Engineering, was published by Thynks Publishing in October 2013. A second pamphlet will appear in September 2016 from Red Squirrel Press.

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

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