The Witches of Long Compton
By onemorething
- 2964 reads
An explanation - this started with a folktale about Old Nan (I called my grandma, Nan) and her murder and accusation of being a witch, her support by the witches of Long Compton and a white hare that served as a sighted warning on nights when boys were hunting rabbits. There are also women of the mist in Somerset, known to herd deer by a hillfort, trendle is an old word for circle. Harfang is an C18th word for a snowy owl derived from the Swedish for hare-catcher (thanks to Cian on Twitter for that one). Gleek means trick. I think most of the words I've made up are self-explanatory...
Moonset in the loamy dark,
moorblooded, Old Nan is out
soulfishing again, wimple-faced,
minding the harfang
on a hushwinged hunt of his own.
What fear there is of grey-haired women,
the rattle and jankle of a carapace,
though the truth is more terrifying
if we can find it amongst the ashes
of lies. The truth is, that his heart,
being made of nought, but bread ---
I plucked it out and fed it,
piece by doughy piece,
to the waiting birds.
I am a woman of the mist, myself, now,
herding red deer on the trendle,
gathering bones as I go
without a gleek: listen to the white hare's tale -
my wisdom is beautiful.
Image is a Vinterhare by Bruno Liljefors in the public domain here: https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Bruno_Liljefors_-_Vinterhare_1917.jpg
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Comments
Having formerly lived in
Having formerly lived in Wiltshire for many a moon, I would have calculated from your words that you had set this poem in that part of the world, even if you hadn't told me.
Superstition, antiquity and mystery; this is the stuff of the Somerset Levels and the Marlborough Downs. You took me back there. Thank you!
Turlough
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The imagery in this poem is
The imagery in this poem is spellbinding (which is quite apt I suppose) - thank you very much for this special piece onemore. Harfang is a word I've heard in a children's story, I'm sure of it - perhaps the Narnia Chronicles?
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where the giants lived, who
Silver Chair, where the giants lived, who wanted to put them in a pie? ps thinking that might have been like hoar fang, because in a snowy place? If fang means catch in Swedish, he could've been hinting at snowy trap.
Maybe the old word for owl would mean white catcher?
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You are right Di - and it was
You are right Di - and it was definitely harfang! Well done for remembering!
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I loved the idea of finding
I loved the idea of finding truth in the ashes of lies. Also liked very much "moorblooded". We used to go to Dartmoor when I was little, it does seem to get into one's blood, or the feeling of who one is, forever. And the moor itself is like a big heart that you can go round and round in, like blood, on its paths.
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Your poem was so interesting
Your poem was so interesting to read, and it's great to read something new about Witches, I have a particular interest in the Wiccan ways from way back, yet I knew nothing of the Witches Of Long Compton, so you've introduced something new to me.
Thank you for that Rachel.
Happy New Year.
Jenny.
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Evocative
What an eerie evocative poem, the language of the mists and hidden places. I really can't add any more praise to what has already been offered above.
Dougie Moody
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Ending the year on a very
Ending the year on a very high point, this is our Facebook and X Pick of the Day!
Please share on social media if you enjoyed it as much as I did
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"I am a woman of the mist,
"I am a woman of the mist, myself, now,
herding red deer on the trendle,"
A mystical reverie that transends the boundaries of mere language. Words are a beautiful thing. Just wonderful. Paul
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Enthralling in the purest
Enthralling in the purest sense - I was absolutely in its thrall from the first line. I love the idea of being a woman of the mist, and there is indeed a fear of grey-haired women. I didn't know about the Long Compton witches, so the poem sent me to the internet - what a fascinating story. Thank you for the poem and the new knowledge! Happy New Year!
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wisdom is indeed beautiful.
wisdom is indeed beautiful.
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This is our Poem of the Week
This is our Poem of the Week - Congratulations!
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