The Birth of Blodeuwedd
By Angusfolklore
- 841 reads
You, under heaven, sang nine songs for her,
here on this hill:
Math and Gwydion,
magicians before the bards found Christ.
Oak and broom and meadowsweet,
gathered to the cauldron
in deep Britain’s sleep,
making a bride for their nephew, Lleu.
What weeks to wait,
anticipating beyond the scent,
distilling the maiden from
leaf, stamen, petal’s luminescence.
You could hardly hold him
back from tasting what would
have broken the slender magic.
Making a flower woman,
in your madness,
an arrogance bound
to fail.
(Sardonic Frankensteins a thousand years
and five hundred years, before Shelley
made her monster.)
Your over seeing eyes watch
her rise,
woman from cauldron’s womb,
owl faced she arrives, knowing
something beyond sour chemistry
which called her here.
The love lost boy runs
forward to embrace
and shield her nakeness,
but over his shoulder
her makers see eyes
that are not human,
the face that holds
no love for him,
nor can for any man.
- Log in to post comments
Comments
An interesting comment on
An interesting comment on human attempts at meddling with the supernatural, and being independant of God in so doing, always being permeated by evil and tragedy and beauty corroding into bitterness. I think in the mythology she conspires against her husband, but in the end is conquered. 'Blodeuwedd' meaning 'visage/face of flowers'! Rhiannon
- Log in to post comments