Celebrating, not Valentine’s Day, but its origins and the inspirational, compelling beauty and power of the wolf.
and an empire grew strong…
14 Monday Feb 2011
Celebrating, not Valentine’s Day, but its origins and the inspirational, compelling beauty and power of the wolf.
10 Friday Sep 2010
Posted in Photography, Poetry, Western
Tags
Anglo Saxon, autumn, Celtic, Hamsterley, harvest, lammas, Moon, Photography, Poetry
Harvest Moon, the time for braiding
The golden strands of the full grown year,
In light and shade your life cascading,
Butterflies and pipistrelles brushing near,
A swallow’s eye view of sunlit hayricks,
The swoop and glide of gold mosaics.
~ ~ ~
Cherry Ripe Moon, your sweetness overflowing
As wasps drink deep of windfall wine,
In autumn’s haste the sense of summer slowing
As time is seen to swelter on the vine,
Deep within the tang of sunburst red
A future paler summer is embedded.
Dog days Moon, now time delves
In the deepest dunes, these days without end,
Or so we like to tell ourselves,
When Sirius is the sun’s best friend ~
A firefly here, then there, a firefly gone ~
Two stars ablaze in unison.
~ ~ ~
Feather Shedding Moon, you draw the breeze
To the eye with the ambling flocks
Of thistledown and the rustle of green ash keys
As time ticks away in dandelion clocks,
Summertime’s state of sweet undress,
A preened illusion of stillness.
Hazel Moon, shining fountain of the night,
Shedding your light on the five flowing streams
Of our senses in the hope the salmon bite
And cast the husks of truth upon our dreams,
Masters of the current, we find our wings
Beneath the radiant brow of our beginnings.
~ ~ ~
Still Green Moon, a drop of dew held
At the tip of a grass blade, a moment
Of pine tree stillness about to be felled
By the wind, a finishing touch of scent
Here, at the hub of the round, rolling world,
The last rose of summer, a flame uncurled.
~ ~ ~
Words by Claire
all images by Amy (13) except ‘thistledown’ by Claire
10 Tuesday Aug 2010
Posted in Photography, Poetry, Western
Tags
Amanita muscaria, Anglo Saxon, Animism, butterfly, Celtic, Hamsterley, harvest, lammas, Lugnasadh, Moon, nature, peacock butterfly, Photography, Poetry
Corn Moon, this is your ripening
In the living patchwork of the year,
When moments are fruits for gathering,
Whispering their sweetness in your ear,
As butterflies make play of light and shade
And the length of time is a masquerade.
Heron Moon, glimpsed in the stream
Of summer before your silver white wings
Spirit you away to another dream,
You know it is the way of things
To flow, even when they seem to pause ~
Nature has no freeze~frame for her colours.
Holly Moon, in your waxing we feel the waning
Of the year ~ this hedgerow and meadow
Of drifting time staining
Our thoughts with the taste of tomorrow.
Stack the pantry with jars of summer scenes,
Winter is waiting in the evergreens.
Mead Moon, summer’s cup is brimming over
And the fabric of your hours slowly rolled,
The bees are making honey of the clover
And thunder gives you fields of beaten gold.
Take this sip of time and may you never thirst ~
The song your streams have long rehearsed.
Water~lily Moon, you bloom on the brow
Of the year, offering up your flame
To the very breath of now,
Petal by petal, staking your claim
With silently crafted grace
On the night dark pond of summer’s palace.
Claim Song Moon, fill your pen
And write your prayer with golden ink
Hail to thee, earth mother of men!
For this life is over in the blink
Of an eye ~even as we live, we die,
But not the moon, time’s immortal firefly.
words and images by Claire
7.08.2010 ~ 10.08.2010
03 Tuesday Aug 2010
Posted in Photography, Poetry, Western
Tags
Anglo Saxon, Dalby Forest, fruits, harvest, lammas, loaf mass, Lugnasadh, nature, Photography, Poetry
The sun rises with a new expression.
the skies are a deeper blue,
and the breeze has a softer embrace.
Corn turns green to gold,
The lonely scarecrows in the fields
smile at their handiwork.
Brown hands swarm like bees
around the fruit-filled trees
that bounce in the new autumn wind.
Poem by Amy Claire Rose (13)
images by Claire (Dalby Forest North Yorkshire 2.8.2010)
08 Thursday Jul 2010
Posted in Photography, Poetry, Western
Tags
butterfly, foxgloves, Hamsterley, Litha, Moon, oak, Photography, Poetry, Summer Solstice
Honey Moon, this is your swarming
On the sweltering broodcomb of the year,
Even as the sweetest cells are forming
The prints of travel stain begin to appear,
In the heyday of light, the hum of wings,
Procession of crumbed gold offerings.
Foxglove Moon, a flush of sunlight
On the forest path and the colours of dawn
Find the wings of second flight,
High above fields of ripening corn
A mind is awakened by the breath of scent,
Silent and yet so eloquent.
Mead Moon, with light at its height
Drink deep of summer while you can,
The wolf never lets Sunna out of his sight ~
Time stands still only in the mind of man.
Even as the wild rose charms the morning air,
Each kiss is a countdown to the end of the affair.
Oak Moon, our door to past
And future days, your heart sings
With the wren through lightning blast,
You sail with heroes and sit with kings,
As flowers flag wisps of beauty on the breeze,
You raise your cornerstone of centuries.
Litha Moon, the butterfly settles,
An open jewel case in the sun,
A life of colour borne by petals,
When she catches your eye her work is done
And she flutters away with no hint of regret,
Chasing herself in whispered silhouette.
Field Poppy Moon, in your sweeping swallows
Over and again, the delicious gust
Of breaths of clover and winnowed meadows,
Moments so soft they are merely air~brushed
On summer’s mind, as she sits on her swaying swing
Watching her shadow lengthening.
Words and photography by Claire 8.07.2010
10 Thursday Jun 2010
Posted in Photography, Poetry, Western
Tags
Anglo Saxon, Celtic, hawthorn, lilac, lotus, Moon, Photography, Poetry, summer
Lilac Moon, this is your fragrance
In the pulsing softness of the year,
The land throws aside her pearls of elegance
Now summer whispers in her ear,
While the lane is strewn with sweet, discarded lace
Your incense smokes on an urban terrace.
Rose Moon, pause and bloom in still reflection,
Keeper of the Winds, north, west,
South and east, thorned with the fire of protection ~
The cuckoo tricked love from a goddess’ breast~
And so you flower, a watchman at the gate
Ever vigilant, yet in form so delicate.
Summer Moon, the hours drift, flake by flake
In falling silk, the highways and byways
Stream cream~white in the milk moon’s wake,
In the silver shawls of elder sprays
And beside the river where the cow parsley stirs
Olwen’s walk through an empty universe.
Lotus Moon, you transcend the darkness,
Born resplendent from the pool of the night,
Shimmering in the lap of time’s caress,
The balms of summer in your unfolding light.
Stars swarm on wingless silver to sip the gala
Of your rays, nectar of your mandala.
Hawthorn Moon, you draw the faery to your eye,
A spindle of sleepthorn is an age of dreams,
Your smoke is a rite to purify,
Your wood the tool of an enchanter’s schemes,
As Brunhilde and Merlin succumbed to such fate,
You ~Woden and Vivien~ still intoxicate.
Love Bright Moon, you the wax~seal
On the contract of forever that was inked by time
Long before there were hearts to steal,
By night, you spirit us away to Alfheim
When we rhyme our dreams under the Eildon Tree,
And show us a glimpse of all eternity.
Claire(words and pictures) ~photographs taken in Hamsterley Forest, County Durham 5.06.2010
04 Friday Jun 2010
Posted in Poetry, Rites of Passage, Western
From a band where the ocean meets the sky
A striation of liquid and aerial blue,
A drop of the ink of a damselfly
More vibrant than sapphire, I give to you.
From the end of the spectrum where an iris dwells
A three point star shoring the mist,
Jewels of cornflowers and sweet bluebells
To circle the softness of your wrist
And the cobalt of twilight in endless flow,
Crystalline scales of a morpho’s wings
Wrap and overlap of silk for you, a kimono
Stitched with a sonata a blackbird sings.
May’s moon candle~ends linger past sunrise
As I write you the blues I see in your eyes.
Claire (Mum) 4.06.2010
And from the Carmina Gadellica, a Gaelic blessing for you :
I bathe thy palms
In showers of wine
In the lustral fire
In the seven elements
In the juice of the rasps
In the milk of honey.
And I place the nine pure choice graces
In thy fair fond face
The grace of form
The grace of voice
The grace of fortune
The grace of goodness
The grace of wisdom
The grace of charity
The grace of choice maidenliness
The grace of whole-souled loveliness
The grace of goodly speech.
Images courtesy of WebEcoist and College of Idaho.
02 Wednesday Jun 2010
Posted in Photography, Poetry, Western
To exchange genes, as bacteria do!
To network and quorum sense,
Discard the old, embrace the new.
To sit with the robin on the fence
And the blackbird on the chimney stack,
Then sing their silver eloquence.
Or plunge in to the depths of lilac
Then carry her musk wherever you go,
Or traffick bluebells along the beaten track.
To dance with damselflies and wear their glow,
Be azure sky in winged imago.
~~~
To leap with salmon then shake the stream
From irridescent rainbow scales,
To breathe the rose and live her damask dream.
To sit with stones and hear their tales
Then stand an ancient on the hill
Cooled by the breeze a kestrel sails.
To roost with bats then feel the thrill
Of swooping darkness, or brush wild iris
And become forever tranquil.
Sleep through silken metamorphosis
And flutter Brimstone on a lake of sky,
Knowing precisely what it is
To be the butter-coloured fly
And the moments of lifetimes passing by.
~~~
The poem was inspired by reading Stephan Harding’s ‘Animate Earth’. In the chapter From Microbes to Cell Giants, Harding explores the work of evolutionist Lynn Margulis and writer Dorion Sagan who came up with a potent analogy that enables a non-scientific mind (like mine) to grasp the concept of bacterial capacity for gene exchange. To quote Harding:
“Margulis and Sagan provide a further analogy. If we had the gene-swapping abilities of bacteria, then by merely smelling roses and inhaling the rose-smell gene we would smell like roses ourselves, or we could develop tusks just by spending a little time in close contact with elephants”.
And so, with some poetic license and imaginative freefall, the poem was born. It could have been written without the first verse, but I felt I wanted to include the bacteria in the story – it is their story after all! – and I’m sure not many of us would see bacteria in a poetic light.
Where does that concept take you?
Claire 2.06.2010
10 Monday May 2010
Posted in mythology, Photography, Poetry, Western
Tags
Anglo Saxon, Beltane, Celtic, Moon, Photography, Poetry, willows

Magnolia Moon, this is your waxing
On the candlebough softness of the year,
In the melting and the sap~blood relaxing
Of wanton flux, the salvers of cere
In their exquisitely slow glissade of ethereal presence,
Their becoming an act of evanescence.
Three Milks Moon, your star sentinels
Witness Woden’s rite of rites,
When he gives of himself to learn nine spells,
Hanging for nine days and nine nights
Until he takes the runes up, dreaming, on that windy tree
And his ritual death lets loose a night of sorcery.
Beltane Moon, moon of bright fire,
Rhiannon unlatches the gates of the sun,
Feel the full flush of sunrise, the flood of desire
And for the soul at the threshold a new life begun.
The smith at the forge shapes a ring for the bride,
As the beasts walk the fire~paths, purefied.
Frog Moon, you the pool and well
Gleaming with votive offerings of bronze
And gold and silver, you who darkly tell
Your secrets to the ovate night and brush the shaman’s
Questing mind with your magical skin,
Akin with water, salve and medicine.
Willow Moon, sweet release of sorrow,
Ebb~flow of resonance and harmony,
In the romance of catkins, sing all a green willow,
In laments of love, pure rain of melancholy.
Divine in their living and their wands, they who stand
By water ease spirits to the Summerland.
White Lady Moon, the face of the goddess
Is mirrored in miniature in elder sprays
And cow parsley, in every bead of earth’s dress
Of dew ~ and yet others of our land feel her rays
In Sunne, hearth and beacon, our guiding star
And the moon god, faithful, keeps our calendar.
Claire
[Click on 'moon' in the tag cloud to read all moon poems in this sequence, starting with Leaf Dance Moon, which was the first one I wrote
]
07 Friday May 2010
Tags
Incense sticks on the sliced bamboo barque
Brought into being by fire,
Smouldering down driven by the spark
Sloughing themselves away, wire
Dissolving as the current passes through.
Barque, gliding without gliding,
Stately, down the Nile of this all new
Always was moment. Pure air subsiding
Under fragrant influence. Fragile
Columns of powder, sweet stalks, clutch
At the very air that burns them. Futile
This living in longing for lasting touch.
Being, in burning burns away
The gleam of now becomes the rust
Of past. Living is the slow decay
And the beautiful being lies as dust.
Claire
(image courtesy Tibet incense)