Thursday, December 30, 2010

Oh Where Did You Go?

The sun was bright and blazed in my eyes.
I bitched and moaned and wined and cried.
At the vile orb and it’s burning light.

Now he is gone and we are blind in the fog.
Shivering, wet, and cold.

Oh where did you go,
Lord of life, maker of sky?

We are miserable now.
Did you seek warmer clime
Far to the south where the coconuts grow
Sailed away in your chariot-boat
To dangle your toes from a white beach coast?

The trees are heavy with ice and snow,
Sagging and drooping ‘neath the load.
And it takes a sleigh to travel the roads.

Oh we implore, please don’t be long.
Shivering, wet and cold.

Oh where did you go,
Maker of sky, lord of life?

Come shine, and blaze in my eyes.
We won’t bitch, or moan or wine or cry.
We love the sweet orb and its burning light.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

The Knight of Flowers

Little Keldoran shivered, it was not so cold on this night but he had fallen into a frigid irrigation ditch in his haste to report what he had seen to the good folk of the Glastongrimmine Manor.  The offending channel ran beneath a rickety old corral fence that divided the yard proper from the cart path and enclosures and he had slipped right in on his way over, he was streaked with mud and a little of his own blood seeped from a nasty scrape on his left arm.
     “There now, have some hot cidermull and explain yourself” cooed mistress Orrin as she brushed Keldoran’s sodden hair from his face and daubed at the grime around his newest wound.  This was nothing new, a bruised up peasant boy in her kitchen.  Bathtilde Orrin cared for most of the farm boys who came from the near by village of Scyldis to work her masters fields for the growing seasons, boys always had cuts and contusions to be cleaned and bandaged, and she kept a good store of healing salves and various oppilatives, along with Lordia and Levenseep at a modest cost to Master Glassman who owned the summer-manse and the fields and forest around it.
     Chief Parminster Aldwin Grump stood near, hunched over a wicked looking pitch fork. The device was decidedly made for more than tossing hay and grain around. The elaborate set of proofing he wore about his stout frame suggested that he was used to more than just cuffing farm boys and shepherds.  A steep of bloodmarks trailing a thin line down his thick neck bore testament to more than one victory over nicker-kind. He was eying Keldoran now with a keen look of anticipation. A sighting of boggles in the woods was often reported first by the simple field hands who toiled next to the terribly threwdish Matsch-mire.  The hour was late, just after sun down and it was known that the more malicious of nicker folk took advantage of darkness, using it as cover for their heinous acts of trippery.
     Keldoran began his tale drawing himself up to appear brave before Farm Chief Aldwin. “Well we was late herding the livestock into their night-pens.” Keldoran’s brown eyes were wide, and he trembled slightly as he spoke. “A goose sir, tried to take wing, it hopped about something fierce and made for the open pasture headed for the
Brundle-stream. I chased it all the way to the Matsch-mire. Then I saw something, something big, on the edge of the deep wood creeping through the shadows of the ancient oaks.”  Here Keldoran shifted in his chair and pulled away as Bathtilde ran her wicken cloth over his now stinging abrasion.
     Chieftain Grump interjected with a sharp intake of breath. “It was that Stoopback Horned Widderlichen they’ve been seeing down by Scyldis. Were’nt it boy?  I’ll give my best triquarter if it was’nt! Young Murlow was saying how Master Glassman’s pigs shied from the forest this morn, when normally they is wote to go charging in after acorns straightaway!” He started for the solid oak door leading to the yard, clearly meaning to deal with the nattering beast as quick as he could.  “No time to wait for a Writ of Singular.” He exclaimed.  “We know where it is. Bathtilde, send to the far meadow house for Mr. Fricke, and his gang of scollops.”
     “Wait!” cried Keldoran in an excited tone. “The blighter is done in! I saw ‘im put down sir.”
Grump halted dead, and slowly turned, peering at the sun browned farm boy. Keldoran hurried on, his eyes growing wider and his voice more lilting at his next statement, truly a boy in wonder.
     “It was Sir Eschelon Flowers sir!” Now he hopped from his stool and began to illustrate his tale with wild gesticulations, a bright grin on his now clean mug. ”It was The Once and Again Aster Star of The Empire!”
     Lady Bathtilde Orrin shushed him in the way mothers and wet-maids have. “Don’t use that title Keldoran!” She exclaimed, abashed.
    “Aye lad” Aldwin said in his gentle tone. “I don’t give a wits bald arse, but it’s not something to be said around your average everyman. Keep up with what ye eye-balled son.”
“Yes’m Grump, sir. The boggle spied me sir and leapt straight for me, springing from the woods. I reckoned’ it was the Horned Widderlichen, for I that’s almost all I reckd’ a wolf’s face with four wicked horns like a goat’s and a grinning sneer, with enough teeth to smatter a whole brace of conies. I thought it was knickers-end for me sir, but it snatched up the goose and paused to shake it down its gullet. Then came lighting sir, and I thought I was done in twice!” Keldoran’s exuberant simulation of what came next almost upset the pot of cidermull steeping on the kitchen’s permanent laborium.
   “The Duke of Flowers did it! He sizzled the nucker and leapt in with his heater and bastard. He knocked away two blows of vicious claws and broke a horn.” Keldoran fumbled in sack cloth trews and produced a piece of black ivory. “Then the thing lit the ground, backed up and ran at The Lord Aster. Aster sir, he just stepped aside and slid his bastard into the beastie’s shoulder, there was burst of sparks like a Midtide reporter and an awful stink settled onto the turf.”
     “Go on Keld”, urged Parminster Grump enthralled with the story now as if he were watching one of Pendrift’s panto-play’s in far off Boschenburg.
     “Well that was it sir. His grace stood for a moment with his head bowed as if he were sad to have smitten the dastard, his long mustachio drooping. 
     Then he turned and looked to me, he had a fabulous harness, the like of what you never saw!” Keldoran’s oration took on a tone of admiration, and Bathtilde smiled a knowing smile.  Many a young boy in these parts exchanged stories of the Duke of Flowers the famous Haacobian knight, who hailed from this very region all be it a little farther to the west in Braumschtick. And all of them knew full well that he had been put to the pillet for sedition and forced to flee the capitol and now roamed about the Half Continent lending his fulgarities where they needed to monster and every man alike.
      Grump helped himself to a pot of steaming cider mull and dug about for a cold beef clumsy as Keldoran carried on. “His habiliment sir, it was brilliant! A thick sable and claret brocade, it must have been made by the finest cloth-smiths sir, no cloth or leather glimmers like that. And it had wondrous small flowers in silver filigree all about it, of many colors sir, so many that rainbows danced across its surface when ever he moved about and when he would arc, those filigree flowers would light up like burning star coms. ” Keldoran’s eyes could not get any wider the brown orbs fairly bulging from his sun dark dial. “Then he said to me. ‘Wretchin’s will be wretchin’s lad, and it’s not every every-man as deserves to be wretched.’  He turned into the halt-mire woods then sir, and I thought I caught a glimpse of Esquires Autumn, and The Bittern of The Mark his factotum’s sir, in the deeper gloom beneath an hoary old oak tree’s branches. And then they were gone, melted into the night-scrub and shadows, with only a small jingle of Master Eschelon’s spurs.”
“By the Glassmasters arse” exclaimed Grump “I don’t know why lad but I believe ye don’t be telling me a fantastico. We’ll be out to skrive the area tomorrow Fricke and me, we’ll find if the blighter had any shard-born gibbert-jacks lurking around with him.” He put fond hand on the boys shoulder. “Well a night to ye lad, get decent rest-over. I’ll roust ye come morn to show us where the Widderlichen was vascerated.”   
     Lady Orrin slyly tried to slip an obtorpe into another pot of cidermull for Keldoran, but not sly enough. The perceptive lad tossed it back but held the draught in his mouth until he was out the door where he promptly spat it to the dirt. Then it was off across the enclosures toward the far meadows.
      Day light awoke to find Chief Parmister of Glastongrimmine Manor-House Aldwin Grump stalking across the yard, casting dirty looks at any early rising faraday that caught his eye. “Bathtilde!”  He was hollering as loud as his pipes would blow. “Have ye seen that nearly wretched lad? He is naught to be found, and Mister Fricke’s scads’ is missing a fowling piece and a flammagon.” Behind him stumped the rotund Mister Fricke, his almost elephantine corpulence oozing around his lacquered harness, cold eyes small and hard in his puffy face.
     Bathtilde emerged, swishing through the divided door of the manor kitchen and across the threshold into the yard; a well used broom poised in her hands her cheeks rosy in the crisp morning air. She had her famous knowing smile writ upon her face, and Aldwin could almost guess what had transpired. “He left a note sir, and eighteen scruples.”
                           
  Aldwin sputtered. ”Bu but where?”
   Bathtilde’s eyes sparkled. ”He’s run off with The Duke of Flowers, of course.”

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Her beauty

Angels came to play today.
I showed them a vision of you.
They turned away in shame
At the power of thy flame
Crying to the glory of god
Blessing thy beloved name

Some flowers were weeping
And wilting
I asked, “Why do you cry?”
One brilliant rose,
A flower queen replied.
“We have found beauty greater than I.”

A chest of jewels sparkled in the sun
The wealth of the whole known world
But their luster paled every one.
At the beam of a certain blushing girl
The bright burning goddess of love
Thy glowing banner unfurled.
A gift to creation below and above.

Friday, December 3, 2010

Castle Rachelle

Ever have I loved thee.
Like wandering pilgrims we were lost
Our love made to wait.
Far from our castle of dreams
Our ships on stormy seas tossed.
Blame naught but fickle fate.

As I thought thee gone
Lost in the dim world so grey
Weeping and crying “too late”.
The spark in my heart carried on
Quietly sleeping, bemoaning the day.
Loving you always,
Now thank fickle fate.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Cold Bird

I see you in every cold bird that flies by
Or perches on tree or pole.
You smile at me from places on high,
A song for my heart and my soul.
                                      
Winter wind will howl and scream
With wailing voice, and mourn full moan.
Closing my eyes I imagine thee, 
Pray you are warm at home.

I think of your kiss with lips that smile.
Thy bright fiery eyes alight
The sad distance, the cruel mile.
Yet I know each day and night.

We are never apart
Always blessed by that
Gentle love in our hearts.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

A Thanksgiving prayer.

Oh Lord and Lady, we thank thee for another day. Thy innumerable gifts do not go unappreciated. Be with our loved ones as you always are and grant us your devine favor. Open our eyes that we may behold the path of love and follow it, straying not onto crooked ways. Keep us warm through out your cold season and grant us a taste from thy cauldron of plenty. Let us exercise temperance as we interact with our brothers and sisters, refraining from assumptions and condemnation. Hold close the spirits of our ancestors and friends who have slipped back through thy fragile veil. Bid them keep a place for us in thy immortal kingdom.
With gratitude,
in the name of thy sons and daughters,
so be it!

Friday, November 5, 2010

The Polar Bear Queen

Hear now the tale of The Polar Bear Queen
In the north she rules, missing her pale king
Over flowing ice drifts a frosty dream
Riding forever loves eternal ring.
Long lazy circles bring the falcon bold
Swiftly from the blue crystal autumn sky
Fluttering feathers that shine in the cold
A message she bears in her piercing cry.
Though the trouble some old journey is long
A grim loneliness haunts his never-sleep
And the season flees her lover’s dark song
So fly must he soon to her warmed keep.

To the cherished embrace of her circled arms
Her mysterious spell, and delightful charms.

Monday, November 1, 2010

All Hail The Winter-Queen

All hail the cold Winter-Queen.
Here pale knife the Sun-King has slain.
Now she in her cycle turns away.
Smiling no more
with her love in the grave.

Some time in the 90s

Spears of light puncture grey clouds.
The mountains stretch upward
To the fire eye.
Dragging its brilliant weight down.
Grey clouds turn pink
Set ablaze by the heated glare.
Then orange striated with yellow
And purple sky
Folds up over the orb of life.
It's milky-way neighbor's wake.
One by one by two by thousands.
They watch, set in their heaven-home
Until fire breaks the day.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

More Sarah Fimm

http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Karma-Phala-Music-Project/153870757984847


http://www.facebook.com/pages/Karma-Phala-Music-Project/153870757984847#!/sfimm?v=wall

Gaurdians of Dis

This image is by Artist, Author, and Musician  Daecaunt

Red Samurai

Behold!
From the field rises
Red Samurai.
The light of Bushido
A glow in his eyes,
In blood-rain
His armor glazed.

Slick the gruesome battle plain.
One thousand blades
Now noble-dead
A broken purple glave
It's master fled
All that remains.

Behold!
On the field
Red-Samurai kneels
To pray.
Weary, gore-stained,
The Lash
Takes the day!


Written for my friend Lash. ("You know the guy in the red armour") after Artemisian Games one fine year.
Anno Societus XLIV 
By me Fentyr

Monday, October 25, 2010

A Winter Solstice Poem

 
Lo.
Into the darkest night we go.
Wash the blood from thy hands
Thy crimson tears in vanity shed
Fair Prosperpine, dead.

This circle of woe drawn in grief
While the girl of spring time sleeps
Broken not but by mortus release.
Cruel ring, dark ring
Oh nightmares bring.

A Silly Beltaine Poem

Hail the dawn of summer
The Old Man doth truly slumber
Though I lost my ribbons to a Troll
There are more in the village
about the may pole.
Sol rides his chariot high through the sky.
On ward t'ward the shortest night
When we'll cry to the north wind
About our plight
That we're burned in the day-time
and need longer nights!

An Old Swedish Folk Tale

Eleven peasants were walking through a wheat field, it reminded them of ocean waves as the ripening wheat moved back and forth. Soon they begin to fear that one of them had drowned. Sure enough when each one counted the others he only came up with ten forgetting to count himself. It remained a mystery which one of them had drowned. They told there curious plight to an old farmer. The farmer told them that there was a fresh cow-pie right there in the road and each of them should stick there noses in it.
They did, and were relieved when they counted eleven nose prints.

A Few Short Verses.

Let the moon kiss you goodnight.
Follow the stars
The dream-road guide.
Lose yourself in that light.
Drift away far
From this earth and its plight.

Longest day of the year.

Ever spurring the fire eye
Sol flees Skoll
And thus the judgement day.
To Ragnorok
The wyrd-winds blow.
Nott holds no sway.

The corn-maid cries eternal
for the sun-king.
to burn away sins of may.
Ha! For the longest day.
Fare well once again to the lifeless spring.



The champions fiery chariot
chased by winters sting.
Who's cold breath chilling creeps,
To freeze the flora to sleep.

But the champion comes for his maiden,
ever riding the ring.




Estrella XXIV

Well Estrella War was great.  I fell head first in the mud.  Got puked on by a cute girl.  Put out a guy who set himself on fire.  Had champagne with my beloved hat-friend Sati.  Spent way to much money.  Can not remember much of Saturday (turned 35).  Met new friends and had beers and camped with one of my dearest S.C.A.  brothers Mogalin.   Made burnt offering to The Lord of the Wood.  Told a few stories and poems.  Missed those of you who were not there.  Apologized to those who were.  Made it from south of Pheonix to Blanding on one tank of gas.  Found some great coffee and incense.  A Lord died on the field of battle. ( Of a heart attack, not technically from combat.) No one else died (Huzzah).  Broke the lock on the trunk of the car.  Found a new favorite drink. ( 1 part sarsaparilla/ 4 parts rum over ice. )  Found a few new members of The Order of the Green Dragon.   Realized how much I really want a period tent.  Tipped the pan-fried noodle guys five times.  Did not get a sun-burn. Managed not to get stopped at Rimdulars trap. ( or any where else)  Partied with Magh-Thura. ( The southern bunches.)  Resolved to go next year.  Never wanted to leave, and am officially in a state of  stagnant melancholy.

Springtime Dance

With spring time comes a wicked dream.
On fanciful wings strange visions bring.
A restless sleep,
In slowly creeps
The court of the Elfin-king.
Mad the dance,
The dizzying reel.
Crazed,  his visage grim.
Who opened that door?
A secret path
And let the Elf-king pass?
Soft the Dawn-king breaks the day.
The faery chorus stops the play.
The murderous dance
It ceases at last.
And the night-folk fade away.


A Pie for Rowan

To my delight.
On the window sill I saw a pie.
Greedy little child I.
I reached in to get me a slice.
Its' Hot!  I cried.
And tears came from my eyes.
 
Mother sighed.
"That is the world pie.
Wait your turn or you'll be burned.
Have patience.
There are many lessons to  be learned.
If you bide your time.
And always be kind.
You may.....
Get a bigger slice."

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Down to Earth

Falling through the sacred verse.
Falling forgotten, down to earth.
Crashing with a resonant sound.
Into the cold cold ground.
Falling, falling, falling first.
Down, down, down, to earth.
From a sunless sky.
Is this what happens when an angel dies?


For The Girls

A water sprite came to me.
Her full lips kissing sweet.
She drew me down,
down to the Undine deep.
And left me there
with stolen breath.
Drowned in the sea.
With naught care
nor grief or wot to weep
o'er a foolish love-sick boy like me.
 

To me you are like heaven-fire.
The horns of power shining.
Warming my cold lonely way.
A queen or two has fallen before.
Always the life-orb sets on my day.

Bright flower of morning.
From the path do not stray.
Your spear held fast.
When the last skald
His last song
Has played.


 

Mother-nature wept
When she brought forth you.
Her tears the morning dew.
All her children raised there voice
Giving thanks to The Lord on High.
Ne'er a child so fair
Since the shining one walked the earth.
And all man-kind now lifted up
Is blessed by thy birth.




With trembling delight
Thy lissome limbs around me bold
Do excite a not so secret delight.
When thy fair form I do behold
I weep for want of saving you
From your miserable plight
Come now to my arms
Into the warmth and the light.
Hold me forever
Into the blackest night.
Let not the vile stench
Of ill intent turn you from
what is right.
Let my love surround you.
Receive this not so secret delight.



 


 


 

 

Artemisian Games

Come one. Come all.

Drink around the fire.

The spirits salute summers call.


Listen to the stories told.

Of times ancient and old.

As you quaff your ale.

Tales of heroes foolish and bold.

of maidens pale,
and hidden dragons gold.


Rest your weary bones
at Dragonsmarche home.

Leave your worry behind
as you tip your mead in the fires light
and ease your troubled mind.

From Highschool Years

The grass withered where he walked.
The trees bent the other way.
Night time descended when he walked.
Well, that what they say.

I saw him once, deep in prayer,
In the icy still of the church-yard.
I shivered and turned away in fear.
And blessed my self for god.

Next I saw him on the road.
Bereft and empty, dark his eyes.
A marble hand gnarled, stiff with cold.
I swiftly passed him by.
 


She waits for me around every bend
But I mock her
Laugh in her face
She'll not govern when my end.
I'll not run her mortal race.

She will wait for me
Until I am ready to be free
Until I clasp her icy hand
And join her in her lonely land.





 

 

A Bloated Cow

I saw a bloated cow today
As we drove
It's belly huge soft and grey
Ready to burst.
It wobbled in the back of a pick-up-truck.
A methane filled balloon.
A filthy fat stinking carcass.
Dinner for twisted ravenous grubs.

Bound for a carnage filled place
Full of pets neglected, abused, dead.
Great machines will push bones
Around and around
While all the flesh is absorbed
Into the barren ground.

Suffering

To what end this suffering?
Will eternal joy it bring?
If we could find the river Lethe
I would take a sip,
Forget my grief.
All my wanton care.

Then to the spring of Hvergelmir.
A place of far off dreams.
To take our pleasure there.
Before we taste the sting
And by Urd on cruel wings
Our love is rendered bare.

To Camp in These Hills

I love to camp in these hills of mine.
Sometimes hike
There is nothing like
the way they sparkle.

The noon-sun, hot, shimmers
casting it's rays
off of Budlight cans
and broken Sobee bottles

The mid-day heat
can not compete
with the plastic Smiths bags
waving in the breeze
from one or two trees.
And the underwear in
that scrub-oak grove
does not belong to me.

The Lazy Knight

                      I.
It's time to get fat for the winter!
Don't  ask me to climb that hill.
Look here comes my dinner.
They have served it upon my shield.
It's time to get fat for the winter.
I don't think I'll climb that hill.
 
What is it you say?
It's time to march to battle today?
It's time to take the field?
All that din and the clatter,
Some one bring me my platter.
Oh look it's already filled.
 
I think I'll stay behind.
The hogs, the foul and the cattle to mind.
It's time to get fat for the winter.
That's something I don't mind.
 
                       II.
Oh where is the Lord of the manor?
It's time to plow the field.
The Lord of the manor is in his house
Drinking up last years yield.

Its time to get drunk for the winter.
But don't ask me to pay the bill.
Oh look here comes my dinner!
Be careful it's easily spilled!

So what do ya say to a round?
All that rich, foamy, dark ale.
Quick some one bring me a pail.
Too late! I'll just lie on the ground.
Open my mouth.
And pray that I'm not drowned.


                III.
Oh where is that dragon?
It must be slain
This is the last flagon
And he's burned all the grain.

Oh who will slay the dragon for me?
I'll invite you to dinner you'll see.
I fear I can no longer mount my horse
But if you come to dinner I'll eat every course.

Now we've nothing but wine to drink
That dread full dragon
Oh how he stinks!
He's slaughtered some cattle
and eaten some sheep.
I confess.
I'm finding it hard to sleep.

So the dragon, please kill it for me.
Or at least make friends with the awful beast.
For it's awfully cold in the winter
We'd be glad of the heat.
Aye we'd put him to work
At cooking the feast!


      IV.
Well I fear
the Earl is here.
He demands food for the army.
Spirits and beer.
But the lord of the manor
he`s not around.
A maid most charming,
he has found.
The pantry is bare to the ground,
And the barrels all empty.
The whole house-hold soused.

Now The Earl he`s pacing
around the grounds
grumbling and muttering
about food to be found.

He looks rather flustered
All huff and bluster
"Now where is the beer?
The spirits?
No time I fear!
The dreadful enemy
Is drawing near!"

So stowing his thumb in his iron breast plate
he turned on his booted heels to make haste.
Calling "Double time men!!
The drink has to wait!"
We`ll have em by morning
All in their graves!
We`ll sup with the ravens
And be home the next day!"
 
 
               IV.I
Now one small lonely wagon lingers
And a young boy
wringing his fingers.

"Please sir put our dinner in here.
Me and this donkey
We`re to bring up the rear."

He proffers a small bag of coins
Some new, some old
all of them minted of gold.
With an awkward salute
he turns and he goes.
 
 
 
 
             Extras.
Aye and his wife,
not to be found
for she is tending the miller
who has nothing left to be ground.

But more is merrier on the manor grounds
So who wants the wife around?
When maidens are plenty
The beer is so stout!
And  she's having her way
With the grain grinding lout.
 
 

 
 







 

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Sunset

Who killed the sun?
"I."
Said Twilight.
"Pulled him down into the night."

"And I saw him die."
Said Urd.
"His blood spread across the pale blue sky."

"He's not dead."
Cried the Moon.
"Here I'll show you his light"
And she shined ever so bright!

Until Dawn came
A terrible sight
Burning away at the kingdom of night.


Friday, October 22, 2010

Winter Poem

Frau Holda
I am cold.
You shake the down from your blankets,
To much snow.
And your fellow Jack
Frosts my soul.

The dryads will sleep
In the ever-green tree
Inside in the warmth
Through cruel winter deep.

Oh Snow-queen,
Jultom calls,
Old Juleniss.
So release thy cruel hold.

This hard ice-road, cracking my bones
Was ne'er for me.
I can not hear what thy ice-maidens sing.
Just burning kisses my heart to freeze.

Sun-king lying with virgin spring
Forgets his squabbling brood
Leaves us to Frost as he dreams.
But oh what that wicked lady will bring.

Now Red-cap his sleigh of delight
Loaded with lies
From the Fae-realm will ride
Perhaps to snatch him
An unwanted child tonight.

Our doors are circled and crossed
From thy sting
And we remember those lost
In thy season of grief.

Now then from thy ring
Of torture release!
We call on gentle Danu
And winter appeased!
 
 
 
Yup I think snow is on the way.



Another Winter Poem

I entered this one in the local winter writing contest. I never heard from them again.

Oh close your weary eyes Father Sun.
Grandmother winter has come.
She shakes her autumnal apron dry
And the snow flies!
So father sun close your eyes.

Grandmother winter is here.
She hangs from heavy tree limbs
The crystals of her chandelier.
She frosts the frozen ground with snow
And bites at your fingers, ears and toes.

Oh where did Father Sun go?

Now Grandmother winter also brings
One or two pleasant things
Hot apple pie and holy-day dreams
And warm scented fires
A promise of spring.

Beneath cold blankets her grandchild sleeps.
Oh father of summer, her promise she keeps.
Through the long frigid nights forget all your fear.
For Grandmother Winter has come to help finish the year.

A.R. Forsgren


October Poems

More poems written in the month of October. Notice the same themes run through them.


All hail the cold Winter-Queen.
Here pale knife the Sun-King has slain.
Now she in her cycle turns away.
Smiling no more
with her love in the grave.
(2008)





Now is the time for the dead.
See the grinning gourds alight?
Calling them from their bed
Where they, mistaken
thought they could finally rest.

Hear the silent chill,
in the still wind of winter.
Last years fruit now ripe.
The bitter cold to kill.

The hands of skeletal trees
on the harp.
Play The Storm-Kings part.
While we in our turn fall to our knees
and pray for The Sun-Queens' Spark.

As you think of your grandpa
your mother your friends
and all of your kin-folk.
Dead in the end.

Remember.
In darkness, in winter
Her love begins.
And Her love knows no season.
And His love rises again.
(2008)



The Crone exhales
Her cold breathe.
The dieing time
Again.

Old man opens his eyes.
His white beard a blanket.
Hiding the sunlight away.
He takes in her cold breathe.

And they wait
For fertile springs lips
To raise their son
Flowers in his steps.
(2007)

So pumpkins grin.
And the hunter-moon spins bright
Across the sky.
And the fire-eye
Sits in the stinging-house.
As the old new-year
Draws nigh.
Happy Hallowe'en
(2007)
 
Soon, lost-souls come to play.
Strange beasts from nether realms roam free.
Pale full-moon green, spells the land.
 All wise beings settle in to sleep.

Cold breath, rattling old bones,
Through cutting wind.
The song of December-man.
Sings early again.
The heart numb.
Hallowed things
In the grave.

And naught but a bitter taste
Guiding the true-soul way.
(2007)
 
 


 





A Collection of Norse Inspired Verse.

Longest day of the year.

Ever spurring the firy eye
Sol flees Skoll
And thus the judgement day.
To Ragnorok
The wyrd-winds blow.
Nott holds no sway.
 
 
Thunor makes his hammer sing.
Striking jotuns, his ancient foe.
Forging from the ever-ring
Mid-gards gardens,
Ash-kins brutal home.

Hear now!
The battle maidens ride tonight.
Odin-rage dripping from there blades.
The Valkyrie on fearful steads do stride.
The spear-brides bearing the warriors prize.
A place at the end-all fight.

Stout be your hearts!
Axes ring sharp.
The grim howl of the Val-hal harp.
Calls the hero home tonight
Only to dine with ol Garm-feast bright.
And wait for the Gjalarhorns-plight.


Old Odin sat in his one-eye hall.
The two who knew
Past and present flew.
Dire-times the blood-path soaked.
Haunting hollow hill and dale.
Mid-gard-men frail, pale
Die like wheat on the reapers nail.

Transceived now home in Val-hal light.
The spear-groom suffers
The kiss of his wife.
The worm-taste heavy
Clay-hole full.
But the corpse home is not
Where the spirit now roams.


Red-rain showers warriors brave,
Foe men fall.
The Iron-grass has its Gore-water
One-eye blesses his battle slaves

Life-drink slick the shining plane
Raven thick, feasting away,
No care who won the day
The last Wound-dead groans in pain
Val-hall has it's pay.








 


Don't Summon Storms With Anger.

Is that a friendly storm
watering the flowers
where you walk?

Or is it of malice born
striking your enemies
with a brutal spark?

The angry djin
Summoned in ire.
Will eat you within
A wrathful liar.

While the gentle rain
From a loving sylph
Will your garden reclaim
And brighten your realm

The Trolls are Coming

I have a fascination with trolls and giants and the old faery folk especially the northern type. This one is a rather silly series of verses. It is on going and I will most likely add to it in the future.
When I started writing this I was amazed at how many different type of trolls I came up with. Their are even a few that do not have verses yet.
Do you know any trolls? I would love to hear about them.



The trolls are coming.
The trolls are coming!

It’s a big one in front.
A King of the Trolls
By the size of his gut.
He has a long beard
That drags in the mud
It’s tangled and snarled
A home for stray bugs
And he is drinking swill
From a huge oaken mug

Next we see the mountain trolls
Each of them juggling
Large heavy stones
There is moss on their toes
And strength in their bones
Best ye respect these hearty folk
And let them be in their earthly home.

Oh a rare sight indeed!
Are these book-trolls I see?
Each with long fingers
Leafing through pages and pages
Of stories of ages
Their large pale eyes
Well suited to read
The books they have
Pilfered from you and from me

Even the lazy trolls have mustered.
Look how they posture and bluster.
With drooling jaws
And greedy snatching claws
All day they dream of plunder.
Ask them to fetch their own dinner
They'll wine and they'll whimper
And cry and simper
Until their bellies are full
Then insist it be you
To wash out the bowl!


Now comes a common breed
They guard things,
Like bridges and crossroads.
The weird neighbors abode
All shapes and sizes
With clever disguises
Masters of riddles
They collect tolls
Be it a tune on a fiddle
Your flesh or your gold

If this sort of troll
You never meet
You will be lucky indeed!

Now let your eye stray
To these beautiful maids
The troll-wives are fair
Beyond compare
See how the sun sparkles
And plays in their hair?
Their lissome, long legs
Lithe in the grass
Oh for the love of a buxom
Troll lass!

An Irish troll I see
Not the Chuan of the glen
But an ancient fir-bolg
Hoary and grim
With one eye like Balor
Bearing a harp and a drum
An old spirit of Eyre
Who rumbles and plays
As he comes

In dirty red hats
With cruel knives
And empty sacks
Beware! Stay back.
The vicious red-caps
Will take you away
Unless your mother
You obey.

And what have we here?
With eye-brows arched
And ugly, pinched faces
Cold hearted, critical trolls,
Never liked, always hated.
But you’re wrong
And they’re right
Despite
What you know
And they don’t.
Don’t be a wretched,
Critical troll,
A know it all creature
With no friends at all.


Stinky trolls never good!
Tuck your nose
Away in your hood
You can see how they reek
Grimy skin
Moldy old feet
Foul breathe
Unbrushed teeth
Some even smell
Like warm rotten meat.

The old snow Trolls
They let their drums roll.
And the cold blows
Into your armour holes.
Let it snow....let it snow.
The old winter trolls
Are coming to freeze your bones.

A Well Fed Troll

Once there were three brothers. They were unfortunate and mis-shaped.
    The first brother was very tall with enormous hands and feet. He was so clumsy that he broke things every where he went.
   The second brother was of average height but he was a hump-back and tended to let his hair grow long and unruly, he never combed it or washed it. He was not hire able.
   Third brother was well enough in body but he had great big ears, and bulging eyes that were yellow with sickness, and when he had a beard on he was quite frightening indeed. No maid would look at him.

  
   Rather than lament their unfortunate states, the brothers decided amongst them selves to make their abode far away in the high mountains. Taking what tools and supplies they could gather, and a few goats for meat and milk they removed themselves from other folk and were content to live a life of seclusion.


   Now first brother, though he was clumsy was rather clever at certain things, and fishing was one of them.  Often he spent his days snatching salmon and gronling from the mountain streams and lakes to smoke for the winter.
  Third brother favored long walks in the woods where he could forage for mushrooms and sweet onions and smell the fragrance of the earth.
  Second brother was happy to tend the goats all through the lazy day, and became good at making cheese and kefir. He kept bees and could make a  fine mead as well.
  In this way the brothers survived and were happy.


   As progress is ever the way of human-folk, a small village soon appeared not far from the brothers’ secret home-stead. Eventually the folk of the village began to discover signs left by the brothers.
   The first evidence was foot prints, twice as big as any normal person down the valley on the shore of the lovely lake. 'It has to be a large creature' thought the villagers.
 
   One day third bother was ambling through the dark forest early in the morning just before dawn finding fresh morals and savoring the mist rising from the rotten forest floor, never noticing the drunken farmer stumbling home in the early morning fog.

   "It has bulging eyes and huge ears and digs in the earth" cried the peasant when he woke up that same afternoon.


   And then second brother was spotted by a small girl one evening just after sunset. He was carrying a large Billy-goat over his already humped shoulders and the horns curved sharply, tangling in his shock of messy hair. He must have been a frightening sight for such a small child.

   Now the village counsel thought long about what to do with a troll in the mountains near their ever expanding farmland.
   No one wished to fight it. Every one agreed that trying to slay a troll was folly. And the best thing would be to try and keep it's belly full so it had no need to gobble up poor stringy peasant folk.
   So it was decreed that every one should leave what extra they had each week down near the lovely lake by a tall pile of stones for the troll.

   The three misfigured brothers knowing how they frightened regular folk remained hidden as well they could, deep in the high mountains and gratefully stowed away the strange offerings that the villagers left each Freya's-day.  In this way they were able to live in the way simple folk imagine kings do, never suffering the pain of hunger or the lack of decent drink.


Alternate ending:


If one wishes for an even happier ending it could be supposed that during one particularly cold and hard winter the brothers decide to share the large store of food and goods collected from the frightened villagers. There by saving the village in a time of great need.

October Poem 2010

Each time the wheel turns I try to write an October poem to remember the end of the old Celtic year. Here is the one I wrote this year.

 
 
Again the dying of the year
When goblins appear
With wicked grins
And the veil thins
Arousing mortal fear.
 

What dread creatures haunt the night
To give your weary soul a fright?
Monsters hidden in the deep
With the weakend sun can creep
Into the pale light.
 

 

A skeleton hangs from a tree
A muffled moan reminds me
The turning leaves are falling
And ancient spirits
Are roaming free.
 

Listen.
Hear the quiet sighing breeze
A gentle lament sung for thee.
A hint of spring
In the sun lights dying gleam?


 

Thursday, October 21, 2010

A Sonnet For My Beloved.

     Well lets get down to it then. Most of what I write is poetry. I do on occasion like to write the odd short story. Most of my poems are poems of adoration or gratitude with some silly stuff of the fantastic nature thrown in, and a dark streak where it seems I wrote quite a bit about suffering. (I confess it is a mystery to me what was so terrible,  I can only blame it on certain betrayal's of my love and trust, of which I am not entirely innocent of in my own right.) With out further ado, let us begin with a sonnet written for a certain girl.

R.
Thy sweet tongue need not compose poetry.
Each precious kiss from you gives voice to mine
Thy embrace a poetic place, and holy
Every sweet journey filled with verse and rhyme.
Golden autumn turns to brittle winter
And these chilly bones crave your warm respite.
A lonely inside voice cries “I miss her.
I long to be wrapped in her love tonight.”
Oh Venus, Calm the fit full sleepers dream.
Drench this fierce thirst with the memory of fire.
Keep well my immortal beloved queen.
Mother of Light, Lady of Love and Desire.

And murderous Fate, stay your cruel plan!
Bear me swiftly, and often unto her hand.