Blue haired fairy
flew away far,
transferring charges
to the green-eyed.
She cast spells
to de-ice lands,
making hearts sing
the blooms of spring!
Continue reading at Crazy Nerds
Blue haired fairy
flew away far,
transferring charges
to the green-eyed.
She cast spells
to de-ice lands,
making hearts sing
the blooms of spring!
Continue reading at Crazy Nerds
Once again Sue Vincent’s #writephoto prompt photo has mirrored my dreams. It’s been a challenging two weeks. My computer died, again, and the resuscitation of it was more laborious and disruptive than I had hoped it would be. Breathing into the letting go, what may be lost, what may take monumental efforts to fully restore, has been a call to open the heart.
Lavender Dream
I dreamt of the self starved
my body yielding to others, breathing
out instead of in. I will be there
for you, she knows the whisper as rote
memory so deep the threads bind her own
Continue reading at The Light Behind the Story


Beneath a languid sea
Water woman sings
Music like milk from her breast
Smooth as diamond
Raw as blood
Mother of Man
And Goddess of Love
She whispers a symphony
Of life and death
In the language of Light

Dancing on the way to the hills
Music is heard on the dusty cornfield
As the lady fiddles that song very nicely
Feeling light and with all the thrills
Thrills I feel in my bones and joints
Meandering through the fields of heather
Continue reading at Lady Lee Manila

Small, feared and reviled
Shadowing man’s every step
The hunter hunted
*
I sit upon the garden step, seeking shade… quiet, unmoving. You run across the stones, almost skidding to a halt as you see me. We look at each other, frozen in a moment. Intelligence shines from your eyes. I am supposed to fear you, but I smile. I acknowledge your power of destruction… your species and mine share that propensity. I find you innocent… and beautiful.
Reblogged from Mary Smith’s Place:
Lal October 1989

After the excitement of arriving in Lal I experienced a sense of desolation when Khudadad left next day. Although we’d been travelling companions for barely two weeks, not only had I come to depend on him for so much – from ensuring I was well fed to finding a bed for the night – but I’d truly enjoyed his company. As the truck pulled away I stood forlornly clutching the huge melon he had given me as a farewell gift, waving until he was out of sight.
Stocktaking and updating the record cards of leprosy patients seemed such mundane chores compared to the excitement of travelling, never quite knowing what might happen or where we would end up. Having to begin all over again getting to know a new group of people none of whom, apart from Qurban, I had ever met before was daunting.
Continue reading at Mary Smith’s Place
The running road runs like a river
Through the flowers and the loam;
The one road that I desire
Is the road that’s running home.
Continue reading at Wallie’s Wentletrap

Three days and countless ancient places earlier, our attempts to visit the Cheesewring with Alethea and Larissa had been thwarted by the roiling mists of Bodmin Moor. Mists or not, we were determined to try again on our way home, so once again we found ourselves walking through the triple stone circles of the Hurlers.

This time it was sunny and there were people wandering the stones with us… lots of them. There is much to be said for choosing a day of poor weather when visiting ancient sites. It is not that we object to sharing them but it is much harder to get to the heart of a place when it is full of visitors. It is also unpleasant to see how some… a very few… treat these important parts of our heritage. We view them as the sacred places they were to those who built them and accord them the reverence and respect we would accord to any place of worship, ancient or modern. We do not always have to share a faith to recognise that, at its heart, when humanity turns its face to the stars we are seeing the same Light.

So, leaving the stones and its visitors behind, we passed through with a moment’s acknowledgement of their presence and headed for the Cheesewring, a precarious pile of rock named for its resemblance to an old type of cheese press. It stands at the centre of a once-inhabited landscape and would doubtless have been revered for the spirit of the stone. The formation, over thirty feet high, is natural, carved by thousands of years of weathering… or so the prosaically-minded will tell you. Others will recount how the rocks were piled during a wager between a giant and a saint.

The Giants of Cornwall were unhappy. Christianity had come to the land and the saints were taking over their holy wells and sacred hills. One of the biggest Giants was Uther (who just happens to share his name with King Arthur’s father… but I digress…). Uther was not only the strongest of the Giants, but also amongst the cleverest and he was chosen to represent the Giants’ cause and get rid of the encroaching saints.

He went to Saint Tue, a frail, ascetic man who fasted much and proposed a rock-throwing contest, to which the saint agreed. If the Giant won, the saints would leave the land, returning the holy wells and their offerings to their rightful owners. If the saint won, the Giants would accept the new faith. Uther threw the first stone, a huge boulder which landed on the summit of Stowe Hill. Tue looked at the stones and, his heart full of prayer, lifted lightly a great rock and hurled it at the hill.

Time after time the two contended, until they each had a pile of rocks twelve boulders high, perfectly poised, one atop the other. When Uther hurled the thirteenth rock it missed his pile and rolled down the hill. Tue hefted the final stone, praying with all his might… and an angel carried it to the top of the pile. The Giants had lost and were converted to Christianity and the face of the West Country changed forever. But atop Stowe’s Hill, the stack of boulders remains, still perfectly balanced.
Continue reading at France & Vincent
Left Hand Paths?
*
… The concluding sections of Chapter Twelve are by far its weakest.
*
In them much of the previous story is restated in far greater detail.
*
The woman is given eagle wings with which to evade the ‘serpent’
and bring her to a place beyond it’s sight where she may safely feed?
*
Continue reading at The Silent Eye

They were back, still in a daze, amazed at the colours, the air, the clouds. She took his hand, in silence, knowing he could not be reached, yet. Was this real? Or was it a dream, another dream? If it was, then she did not want to wake him up, or herself. Not now.
Continue reading at Of Glass and Paper