• About the Journal
  • Book Reviews/Interviews
  • Masthead
  • Our Special Thanks - Supporters of Three Drops Press
  • Paperbacks (Anthologies and Seasonal Editions)
  • Poetry and Prose Pamphlets
    • Among the White Roots by Bethany W Pope
    • Back to Yesterday by Zöe Broome
    • Constellations by Susan Castillo Street
    • Follow the Stag and Learn to Fly by Anna Percy
    • The Unicornskin Drum by Stella Bahin
    • Under-hedge Dapple by Janet Philo
  • Submissions
    • Call for Submissions: A Face in the Mirror, a Hook on the Door (An Anthology of Urban Legends & Modern Folklore)
    • Upcoming Calls for Submissions
    • Web Journal Submissions

Three Drops from a Cauldron

Three Drops from a Cauldron

Tag Archives: wolves

A First Meeting by Claire Walker

05 Sunday Jun 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Claire Walker, fairytales, poem, poetry, wolves, women

A First Meeting

His first sight is a flash of red in his eye line.
He darts for the safety of oak –
so often he plays the hunted,
despite the blade of his jaw.

His sharp eyes settle on the slender girl.
She carries her basket tenderly,
protecting the sweetness inside.
Her mother has taught her to be good.

The plumped dough of the bread and rise
of the cake is not his interest. He imagines her cape
lying fleshless on the grass,
how her skin would feel beneath his claws.

He jumps from his cover, unsure how to strike
conversation. He points to wild flowers,
talks of their beauty under morning sun, asks
why don’t you pick them? She follows his gaze.


Claire Walker’s poetry has appeared in magazines, anthologies and websites including The Interpreter’s House, Ink Sweat and Tears, And Other Poems, Clear Poetry and Crystal Voices. Her first pamphlet, The Girl Who Grew Into a Crocodile, is published by V. Press. Her website is clairewalkerpoetry.com.

It is thought that Ireland became an island at sometime between 10,000 BCE and 5,700 BCE… by Deirdre Hines

16 Wednesday Mar 2016

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Deirdre Hines, folklore, history, Ireland, magic, myth, poem, poetry, ritual, wolves, women

It is thought that Ireland became an island at sometime between 10,000 BCE and 5,700 BCE…

but long before that tectonic wave birthed our
original origins, the packs tracked us

on scent-marked ancient oaks, forest mulch, ogham stones
grew ears like Charon the better to hear the howl-

girls gathering baskets of wolfsbane dream journeyed
in red coats searching Shewolf wisdom down within

by entering an opening in stone, slipping
deep below, embracing the darkness in the light:

raising muzzles starcrooning packbonded place
sharing the lore around turf fires in ringforts,

the lore of all the blue and green living things
pairing She wolf to She who chose to walk the lone path

through shifting, rustling leaves brushing against dream doors
carved from cedar, oak, iron, silver, timber

the bridges between this world and the next arrive
at places that no-one had ever been before-

the places of white starlight, green waterfalls
blue expanses, rocky white-tailed eagle cliffs-

are places that we all have hidden deep within
where leafwindstone play symphonies of memory

of She wolves hunting in rhythm to the drum
that beats out time in time and out of time to send

wolfsong across the seasons of the ages
as harmonics to sound in times of discordant

when all the wolves will have forsaken the land
and been forsaken in their turn-

when all the fishes will have drowned in waters
dirty and contaminated by fiscal balance-

when all temples to trade will have been blown down
by guardian ghost wolves believed extinct-

When professional wolf hunters are back once more
to collect the bounty on all our heads-

only then will they return to huff,puff and blow down
doors bolted shut against She Wolf dreaming awake

the need to feed the heart, to drink the blood body
only then will deficit dissolve away to reveal

the scent of black timber wolf written on your skin
marking packs of wolves met again to sing

old bone back to life on re-remembered Wolf Road
two syllables singing one word, spelling out “greenheart”.


Deirdre Hines is an award winning poet and playwright. Her first collection of poetry, The Language of Coats was published by New Island Press, and includes the poems which won The Listowel Poetry Collection (2011). She has had new poems published in The Lake, Deep Water Literary Journal, Screech Owl, Abridged, The Bombay Review , Your One Phone Call, deadsnakes and The Derry Post. Click on the Youtube link at http://www.deirdrehines.com to hear her read some poems.

Out Now (finally!) - Midwinter Special 2015 (Part Two)

17 Thursday Dec 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in flash fiction, poetry, Seasonal Special

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Boxing Day, Christmas, fairy tales, faith, flash fiction, folklore, frost, ice, legends, myths, poetry, religion, snow, winter, wolves

After a short delay, I’m happy to present Part Two of the Midwinter Special 2015!

Featuring poetry and flash fiction by: Jackie Biggs, Linda Goulden, Bethany Rivers, Cindy Rinne, Dennis Trujillo, Mary Franklin, Chris Hemingway, Ruth Sabath Rosenthal, J.S. Watts, Marilyn Finlay, Irene Buckler, Rebecca Gethin, Allen Ashley, Matthew Harrison, Paul Tristram, C.I. Selkirk, A.C. Grant, Monica Shah, Lynne Viti, Nick Romeo, David Callin, Fanni Sütő, K.M. Ross, A.B. Cooper, Andrew Blair, Marija Smits, Louis Cennamo, and Gareth Writer-Davies.

Trashing the Vice (Heroine Alley I) by Sarah Ghoshal

08 Saturday Aug 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

fairytales, heroines, part one, poem, poetry, red riding hood, retelling, Sarah Ghoshal, sequence, wolves, women

Trashing the Vice

Seriously, just take
your red cloak and
shove it
because I’m done
searching the path
for your legs. I’m
finished with the way
your curls frame you, done
imagining your Mary Janes
under
me. I’ve completed
what’s been expected of
me, the solicitation,
the dirty flight through
the wood, the unfathomable
case of mistaken identity
that comes with desire.

I’m shaming you, girl,
because you’re ready
to give me your jam,
your muffins, your wine,
the whole goddamn
basket slung over an arm
that says, “I have freckles
and the way they sit on
my skin is of story books
and Vogue.”

In the aftermath of my
time with you I’ve seen
how I must look to the ages.
How unbent, how unburnt,
how silly of me to notice.

 

Sarah Ghoshal‘s poetry has been published or is forthcoming in Arsenic Lobster, Reunion: The Dallas Review, Empty Mirror, Red Savina Review and Broad! Magazine, among others. Her chapbook, Changing the Grid, is forthcoming from Finishing Line Press. She earned her MFA from Long Island University and teaches at Montclair State University. Sarah lives in New Jersey with her husband, her ten month old daughter and her dog Comet, who flies through the air with the greatest of ease.

To Live in the Woods by Ziggy Edwards

25 Wednesday Feb 2015

Posted by three drops from a cauldron in poetry

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

fairytales, forests, Perrault, red riding hood, sexuality, wolves, women, Ziggy Edwards

 

Ziggy Edwards is the proud owner of a loft bed. Her poems and short stories have appeared in publications such as 5 AM, Confluence, Main Street Rag, Illumen, and Ship of Fools. Her chapbook, Hope’s White Shoes, was published by Pittsburgh Poetry Exchange in 2006.

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

Recent Posts

  • Three Drops from a Cauldron: Issue Ten
  • A little holiday break…
  • Three Drops from a Cauldron: Midwinter 2016
  • Three Drops from a Cauldron: Issue Nine
  • Three Drops from a Cauldron: Issue Eight

Archives

  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015

Categories

  • Book Reviews
  • flash fiction
  • Interviews
  • News
  • poetry
  • Seasonal Special
  • Uncategorized
  • Web Journal

Duotrope

Listed at Duotrope

Social

  • View threedropspoetry’s profile on Facebook
  • View threedropspoems’s profile on Twitter

Links

  • Folklore Thursday on Twitter
  • Lore Podcast
  • Promises of monsters
  • The Folklore Society

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.com

Tags

age Apollo britain Celtic children Christianity Christmas death england fable fairies fairy fairytale fairy tale fairytales fairy tales feminism flash fiction folklore forest forests Gareth Writer-Davies ghosts goddess gods Greek greek mythology Halloween history Jennifer A. McGowan legend legends lore love Maggie Mackay magic Marc Woodward Mary Franklin modern myth mythology myths nature poem poet poetry princesses red riding hood reimagining retelling review Samhain Sarah Ghoshal Sarah Thomasin Scotland sea seasonal special sequence series sestina Snow White spooky spring Stella Wulf stories story summer trees usa Wales winter witch witches wolves women

Blog Stats

  • 63,630 hits

Photo credit

Main photo of Red Riding Hood is a public domain image via pixabay user Vika04.

Blog at WordPress.com.

Cancel