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. i. The morning mist dissipated as the ships keel ploughed a furrow through the Great Green of the Aegean, leaving far behind the magick isle. Vigilantos stood at the prow, marvelling at the accompanying dolphins, curious and playful, schooling with purpose to the ocean. Ahead, waiting, a grand tour. Of Sumer, Abyssinia and desert lands, to glean hidden knowledge, regain the mysteries of the ancients, read the Necronomicon and old scripts from a time when power crackled, and the storms of the gods belittled the existence of mankind. ii. The twilight Moon peeps from behind the brazen grey cloud. And she weaves hap-hazard through the crushes of the crowd. A high-born daughter of the desert, a vision of beauty from the sand. With silks and satin and perfume richly obtained from foreign lands. Through the colourful bazaar she threads with occasional glances thrown at stalls, priestess jewels sparkle in the night, its her Name the sirocco calls. iii. Cobalt blue water, an illusion of light where the sun slides through the meniscus, and the harbour of Tyre was alive. The bustling of boats around ships at anchor, snatching glimpses of a turquoise sky and the quay throbbing with the pulse of music. It would be another 3 thousand years before Rome was even a trading post on the Tiber, let alone an empire conquering the east, or building hippodromes and columned avenues. Vigilantos drank in the atmosphere, his magicians instincts bristling, noting all. Meandering through the narrow streets, loosely following direction, getting lost. Seeking his retinue and camels, ready to start, across the desert to Ninevah on the Tigris. To speak to tribes, pray with the priests of Ur. To find the secrets of mysteries, and treasure, reaping the knowledge of the Old Gods awe, amongst the shifting dunes of history. iv. Vivid colours of silks and dyes adorn the tents of cloth and stick. The summer sun beats down lazy, heat as oppressive as mist is thick. Her charms and delights are hidden, with misery and pain, the last week spent. The dark, the quiet, the inane chatter, deep within the women's red tent. Free from the curse, her moon-cycle complete, she wanders with mood sombre and slow. A powerful man from a western place will arrive at the camp as the sun sinks low. He had seen her in the main bazaar and decided to stake his claim. Whilst confined away, behind her back, her father had bartered for riches and fame. v. His travels around those beautiful lands had yielded books of law and scripts. He had heard the oral traditions of elders and gazed in wonder at the Moon's eclipse. Then he had seen the greatest treasure wending her way through crowded markets. With tact and guile he discovered her Name, and vowed to grace her father's carpets. The desert folk live a simple life but far from simple are they. Sharp of tongue and quick of wit, erudite in a most unusual way. The father was the elected leader, King of the tribe that he now led. Vigilantos had bargained hard to purchase the girl for his marital bed. vi. The sun sinks, falling from the sky in the eve. Spectacular reds and orange colliding with the dunes. The azure twilight sky lit and sprinkled with stars, and the tribal camp fills with laughter and tunes. vii He walked with purpose toward the campfire, his features silhouetted by flickering light. The sudden hush of the assembled camp echoed strange, deep into the desert night. His eyes beheld her most beautiful form, half in the shadow, half in the light. For her families benefit he had traded, agreed bargains, and come to claim his right. “Princess of the desert, Daughter of the sand, step forward gently and take me by the hand. For my island home calls out loud to me, so come, let us away across the sea”. Head bowed in fake submission she boldly makes her cold admission. “I am a Woman of the free, these sands are my home to me. With all good grace; I could not face life on an island in the sea”. viii. Black and red, darkness and rage descend upon his fevered mind. Humiliated, spurned by a maiden fair, and pride will not be left behind. “A curse. A curse. 'pon thy beautiful head, prowl and creep as do the undead. Evil deeds are now thy course, henceforth our contract is now divorced”. But something made Vigilantos start, a pang of something from his dead heart. With such feelings he could not contend, so a caveat, for the curse to amend. “Thy deeds and crimes maybe invested 'pon mortals only who invest the same such evil 'pon their fellow mortals”. ix. Leaving far behind the desert he turns his face to the sky. The ships keel ploughs a furrow as the evening mist draws nigh. And now she prowls the dark night, her Name lost in the sands of time. Seeking out the mortal sinners and punishing their evil with her crimes. ... and thus it begins ... Judderwitch. © Pagan Paul (08/08/17)
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Aug 14, 2017
Aug 14, 2017 at 12:16 PM UTC
Judderwitch (The Beginning)
. i. The morning mist dissipated as the ships keel ploughed a furrow through the Great Green of the Aegean, leaving far behind the magick isle. Vigilantos stood at the prow, marvelling at the accompanying dolphins, curious and playful, schooling with purpose to the ocean. Ahead, waiting, a grand tour. Of Sumer, Abyssinia and desert lands, to glean hidden knowledge, regain the mysteries of the ancients, read the Necronomicon and old scripts from a time when power crackled, and the storms of the gods belittled the existence of mankind. ii. The twilight Moon peeps from behind the brazen grey cloud. And she weaves hap-hazard through the crushes of the crowd. A high-born daughter of the desert, a vision of beauty from the sand. With silks and satin and perfume richly obtained from foreign lands. Through the colourful bazaar she threads with occasional glances thrown at stalls, priestess jewels sparkle in the night, its her Name the sirocco calls. iii. Cobalt blue water, an illusion of light where the sun slides through the meniscus, and the harbour of Tyre was alive. The bustling of boats around ships at anchor, snatching glimpses of a turquoise sky and the quay throbbing with the pulse of music. It would be another 3 thousand years before Rome was even a trading post on the Tiber, let alone an empire conquering the east, or building hippodromes and columned avenues. Vigilantos drank in the atmosphere, his magicians instincts bristling, noting all. Meandering through the narrow streets, loosely following direction, getting lost. Seeking his retinue and camels, ready to start, across the desert to Ninevah on the Tigris. To speak to tribes, pray with the priests of Ur. To find the secrets of mysteries, and treasure, reaping the knowledge of the Old Gods awe, amongst the shifting dunes of history. iv. Vivid colours of silks and dyes adorn the tents of cloth and stick. The summer sun beats down lazy, heat as oppressive as mist is thick. Her charms and delights are hidden, with misery and pain, the last week spent. The dark, the quiet, the inane chatter, deep within the women's red tent. Free from the curse, her moon-cycle complete, she wanders with mood sombre and slow. A powerful man from a western place will arrive at the camp as the sun sinks low. He had seen her in the main bazaar and decided to stake his claim. Whilst confined away, behind her back, her father had bartered for riches and fame. v. His travels around those beautiful lands had yielded books of law and scripts. He had heard the oral traditions of elders and gazed in wonder at the Moon's eclipse. Then he had seen the greatest treasure wending her way through crowded markets. With tact and guile he discovered her Name, and vowed to grace her father's carpets. The desert folk live a simple life but far from simple are they. Sharp of tongue and quick of wit, erudite in a most unusual way. The father was the elected leader, King of the tribe that he now led. Vigilantos had bargained hard to purchase the girl for his marital bed. vi. The sun sinks, falling from the sky in the eve. Spectacular reds and orange colliding with the dunes. The azure twilight sky lit and sprinkled with stars, and the tribal camp fills with laughter and tunes. vii He walked with purpose toward the campfire, his features silhouetted by flickering light. The sudden hush of the assembled camp echoed strange, deep into the desert night. His eyes beheld her most beautiful form, half in the shadow, half in the light. For her families benefit he had traded, agreed bargains, and come to claim his right. “Princess of the desert, Daughter of the sand, step forward gently and take me by the hand. For my island home calls out loud to me, so come, let us away across the sea”. Head bowed in fake submission she boldly makes her cold admission. “I am a Woman of the free, these sands are my home to me. With all good grace; I could not face life on an island in the sea”. viii. Black and red, darkness and rage descend upon his fevered mind. Humiliated, spurned by a maiden fair, and pride will not be left behind. “A curse. A curse. 'pon thy beautiful head, prowl and creep as do the undead. Evil deeds are now thy course, henceforth our contract is now divorced”. But something made Vigilantos start, a pang of something from his dead heart. With such feelings he could not contend, so a caveat, for the curse to amend. “Thy deeds and crimes maybe invested 'pon mortals only who invest the same such evil 'pon their fellow mortals”. ix. Leaving far behind the desert he turns his face to the sky. The ships keel ploughs a furrow as the evening mist draws nigh. And now she prowls the dark night, her Name lost in the sands of time. Seeking out the mortal sinners and punishing their evil with her crimes. ... and thus it begins ... Judderwitch. © Pagan Paul (08/08/17)
. Prequel to The Judderwitch poem (posted in April). I fear this may create more questions than it answers. My Judderwitch poems are now in a collection :) https://hellopoetry.com/collection/28451/judderwitch/ PPx .
PaganPaul
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Aug 14, 2017
Aug 14, 2017 at 12:16 PM UTC
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