Puck, by any other name…
I answer to many names
Puck, Hobgoblin, Robin
Goodfellow,
even foul fiend when
Mistress
is truly vexed
by my mischievous tricks.
In the cool dairy, the milk
turns sour;
hiding in the shadows,
I bewitch the butter churns.
At twilight, in the mothy
gloom,
I pick fennel, parsley, thyme
and
scatter the withering leaves,
confusing the kitchen
scullion.
At harvest in the summer sun,
I creep into maidens’ bonnets
or in dusty barns, where
motes
dance in rays of light,
I steal grain as the
winnowers work.
In the mill stream I tangle
the fishing lines.
The rose- spotted trout
escape
to cool green shallows.
In autumn, I sit on the
horse’s back,
as he ploughs, turning the dark
soil
into earthy waves.
I pull his ears so he tosses
his head;
the ploughman loses his
footing.
In midwinter, I polish the
ice in the farmyard
as Mistress carries branches
of red-berried holly
and dark- brooding ivy to
bedeck the hall.
I fill lovers’ ears with
tales of deceit
before sleeping in the breathy
warmth
of the murmuring sheep fold.
Beware the Hare!
A snowy February day.
Two hares boxing, the bare
starkness
of a blackthorn thicket.
Seen from the window of a
train,
soon dismissed, forgotten.
A snowbound English village
in the year of Waterloo,
a hare seen: an omen
of defeat, of death, of
disaster,
of a broken heart, of crop
failure, of barren cattle.
Hares lived on the edge
of the spirit world.
Messengers, shapeshifters,
in that strange twilight between
the world we know and
the other.
Symbol of fertility, hermaphrodites,
hovering between male and
female.
Familiars of witches who
changed to hare form
to drink the milk from neighbours’
cattle.
The split lip a sign of
Satan,
a white hare, a broken-
hearted,
double-crossed maiden,
seeking
the death of a fickle wooer.
A solitary, often nocturnal
creature.
A snowbound February day,
two hares boxing.
A spot of blood,
in a white wilderness
still haunts the memory.
It is dark here.
I am running my fingers through the furred
dust. Light, blind folded, cannot find the key. Now at last the smallest of
chinks has appeared; the walls of the dam have been pierced. Flashes of torchlight
in unpredictable sequence light up the mothy darkness. Exercise books,
satchels, morning prayers. Music drifting across misty playing fields awakes
the ear of the past. The dead feel their way through the dusk. They struggle
for breath like desperate fish emptied from a creel on the cold quayside. My
father in his old mac is ploughing the twenty-acre field. The rich earth turns,
noisy sea gulls form a foaming wake above the dark waves. My husband is listening to Bach. As the
violin soars unbearably, he wipes away a tear. Now the far horizon is fading.
Now it’s no more than a faintly pencilled line, the very edge of memory.
Midsummer 1595 (Prose poem)
On village greens, dancers
weave magical patterns of coloured ribbons round leafy green poles. Through
summer meadows, processions of villagers wind their way to bless the fields.
Wicked, destructive devils
and hobgoblins are banished. Green men, swathed in ferns, promise a good
harvest. Bonfires, started with charred wood from the last Midsummer, burn and
flicker. The smoke, like incense, blows over cattle and crops. Blazing fire
wheels are rolled downhill. Spring, summer, autumn, winter are bound within the
flaming wheel. So, the Sun traces its yearly course through the heavens.
On cottage doors, wreathes of
bright green birch and fiery flowers, miniature suns, are hanging. Trefoil,
with its three leaves of the Trinity and yellow St John’s Wort, are being woven
into these wreathes. Midsummer is the Feast of St John, the Baptist, the red
flecks on the petals, symbols of his martyrdom. The wreathes are left to dry in
the Sun.
Between dusk and dawn, the
veil between mortals and spirits is lowered. Witches collect herbs, now at
their Midsummer best, for mixing their powders and potions. Puck, or Robin
Goodfellow, a mischievous sprite, turns milk sour and disturbs the dreams of
lovers. River nymphs ride on the backs of water boatmen. Queen Mab drives her
tiny coach over unsuspecting dreamers.
At Midsummer, all is
possible!
1595 date of Shakespeare’s ‘A
Midsummer Night’s Dream’
Sarah Das Gupta is a retired English teacher from Cambridge, UK. She has taught
in India, Tanzania and UK; Her work has been published in over forty magazines
and journals in US, UK, Canada, India, Nigeria, Croatia and Mauritius. She is
interested in Art, History, Nature, the Environment and Politics.
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