Eventually ~ Na’ama Yehuda #writephoto

He spent the day lying in the field. Waiting.

Eventually someone would miss him, or wonder about how come he is so late.

Eventually they will think of sending someone to check.

For the moment, all he could do was gaze up at the skies, his leg in an angle that no leg should be in, and his breath curtailed to the smallest gasps as to limit the stabbing pain that traveled through him – like a snake’s bite and a red-hot poker combined – if his lungs filled up enough to move the lower part of his torso. He’d never been more acutely aware of how all joints connect.

Continue reading at Na’ama Yehuda

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Camouflage #midnighthaiku

Veiled by assumption

Perception lets monsters hide

Beneath our noses

*

In case you can’t see it, even at this level of magnification, a spider is poised for the hunt, body and limbs stretched out to be hidden beneath a length of nylon line.

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The Small Dog Introduces Henry…

 

Ani, the Small Dog would like to introduce Henry, from Westley Piddle… and muttwits.com.

Henry is a gentle giant with a problem… the vet.

Starting here at 9pm (GMT) tomorrow, follow Henry’s story as he faces a fate no self-respecting Mastiff should face…

 

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Wanting to soar ~ Christine Bialczak #writephoto

Will the wings of the geese carry me to you?

Will the clouds in the sky hold me up to see you?

Will the rain wash away my sorrow?

Upon the wings of geese, I wish I could soar

Continue reading at Stine Writing

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A Thousand Miles of History XXXI: The Wells of the Wishing Tree…

“Ooh!” My companion, well used to the consequences of such exclamations, braced himself as I swung the car off the road we were supposed to be taking and onto a narrow lane. The sign was intriguing and, although we had visited our last planned site of the day, one more couldn’t hurt…

I would probably not have followed the sign had it just said ‘holy well’, but it also sported the words ‘and Celtic chapel’ and that made it irresistible. We had no idea at all of what we might find, but, in my defence, I had this vague notion of the site being close to the main road. Quite why I should have thought so when almost every other site we had visited had entailed a fair walk, I have no idea…but I didn’t expect it to be more than a ten-minute detour.

Leaving the car, we entered a green tunnel straight out of a fairytale. Moss and lichen adorned twisted branches, ferns and flowers lined the path and at any moment, I expected to see the dryads holding out their hands in an invitation to the dance. I have seldom been more aware of the presence of the trees, yet it is difficult to explain why that should be so. It was simply a well-worn path where none of the trees were ancient or particularly remarkable… apart from the undeniable feeling that they were…

We had already walked a good bit further than expected when we saw the clootie tree. Standing slightly apart from the rest and festooned with offerings, it marks the place of the Wishing Well, a wide circular pool with a spring bubbling up at one end, and the entrance to the Holy Well. The Holy Well itself is about a hundred yards away, hidden in thick undergrowth across the spring and the deep mud through which, unprepared and unsuitably shod, we were not about to go wading. There is a small, stone cistern there, half hidden in the trees, and had we been wearing our boots we would have followed the branch in the trail to see it.

The Holy Well is dedicated to St Madern, which may be a Christianised version of a much earlier name. Little is known about the saint except that he was a hermit in Cornwall with connections to Brittany. It is possible that, like many of the early local saints, he did not exist at all…or at least, not in the way he was adopted by the Church. St Madern’s well is also called Madron Well, after the nearby village. But is that the only reason for the name?

‘Modron’, the divine mother of Mabon, whose name comes from Maponos, ‘the Great Son’, is the Welsh version of the old Celtic goddess known as Dea Matrona in the Gaulish lands of Brittany…. And that is one ‘connection’ right there. Dea Matrona was a Mother goddess, often depicted, like Isis and the Virgin, holding her Son to her breast. Mabon is, in some tales, said to be one of King Arthur’s warriors, and his mother may have been a much earlier personification of the personage known to the Arthurian Romances as Morgan Le Fay… which might explain the magic in the trees…

Although the circular stonework of the Holy Well is only around a thousand years old, the sanctity of the site goes back to pre-Christian times, and much of the magic still preserved in folklore tells a decidedly pagan story. One of the legends of the well tells of a man named John Trellie who was paralysed from the waist. The story was reported in a seventeenth century account and tells how John was cured by bathing three times in the well and spending three nights on the grassy hillock beside the well known as St Maderne’s Bed. The bed was remade every year… and this sounds much more like a pagan goddess ritual than a Christian rite, although the Bishop of Exeter was pleased to confirm the truth of the cure.

Continue reading at France & Vincent

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The Weird Kid ~ Brianna Marie #writephoto

“It’s gonna rain soon,” one of the few classmates that spoke to Talia warned her.

“I know. I’m coming,” she mumbled absently, never moving from her snow angel position on the grass. Her eyes were wide but vacant. Why were the birds still here, flying around them? Or were they flying around her specifically? Talia wondered why she was even still there watching them and had spent her whole recess hour in ‘la-la land’ as the adults called it?

“You’re weird.” Some of the other kids spoke with finality and ran inside the school as drops of rain began to fall.

Continue reading at Brianna Marie Writes

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Catching the wind ~ Brian F. Kirkham #writephoto

Swifter than their feathered brethren – they

welcome the signs of a changing breeze

it means they’ll be off with their cousins the swallows

for some warm air , seeds and sunshine, whilst

taking occasional naps under leafy sunshades

Continue reading at  The Inkwell

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Choices

Something different from Colleen this week for her poetry prompt. She asks us to create a ‘found poem’ from the following quotes, taken from Longfellow’s A Psalm of Life, chosen by Pat at Thoughts and Entanglements. Alternatively, we can create a syllabic poem using the quotes as inspiration.

“…In the world’s broad field of battle, In the bivouac of Life,
Be not like dumb, driven cattle! Be a hero in the strife…”

OR

“…Lives of great men all remind us
We can make our lives sublime,
And, departing, leave behind us
Footprints on the sands of time…”

Haiku 

(Found poem)

dumb, driven cattle
great men sublime departing
Behind us footprints

*

Choices

(Double etheree)

When the herdsman becomes the predator
Trust is slaughtered by power’s abuse
Blinded by fear are they driven
Stampeding before a whip
Disguised by honeyed words
Enduring silence
Accepting lies
They are led
Falsely
On
*
Seek
A voice
Heroes speak
Offer their lives
Fully committed
As guardians of truth
Stand instead of fleeing fear
Honouring those who bought that choice
Equality and independence
Walk humbly in the footsteps of the great

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Soar ~ Joe M #writephoto

canadian geese
around here do not migrate
i’ve put down roots too

Reblogged from Joe M at Does Writing Excuse Watching?

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Youth #midnighthaiku

Opportunity

Exciting exploration

Dreamers chasing dreams

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