Sunday, February 5, 2012

What is this battle?

Battle*





Father...do not worry for me today. Sleep for a time, as I.

Gather the Cedars and Rock around you.

Be content.

Be still for a short while.

I have gathered branches of Yew and Water of the Mother...

I have gathered History and compassions of Women

Who stand guard under evergreens in Winter. I have found

The Rowan Tree.



Father...do not guilt me with future knowledge. I learned...

Of children, who run under the darkness of Osiris,

Brave to play in rain that has showered madmen. Children

Who do not know that skulls smile, that water redeems

Without Baptism. That everYou loved them.



Father...do not send my mother. Dead trees do not give

Shelter. Nor rocks, water. I drown content. Do not interupt.

Stay as you are...fragments and laughter.

Do not send the woman of dry plains and dust...spiders and

Guile. Beads and acid...she would

Surrender.



Father...send the Unicorn that did not die, the white raven, and

A martyr who does not rule from the tomb...I have Battles to

Attend...Predators to contain...Foundations and Pits.



Father...do not worry for me. Today. Perhaps tomorrow, when

The Beast escapes and becomes...

Roses.

When Hell disappears, and there is only Heaven. Dealing with

Only Angels is dangerous. In that Heaven is darkness...and

Demons of innocence.



Father...there is Battle at hand. Know that I have slept under the

Hills of Changlings...worn Gold.

Drowned in the waters of unfortunate captains and whistling

Dolphins. Drowned in the folly of waiting women, taken to foam

And tides.

Do not ask.



Gather to the Cedars and Rock. Rest for a short while. Be content.

Women stand guard for you under the darkness of trees. I have

Sent the Mother to watch.

I know where you are. Be content. Do not worry or ask.

I wear Ancient Armor.



It will be Time, shortly.

I stand under the evergreens, waiting and watching.

The Lady of the Rowan Tree stands near, watching...

Waiting.

Father...Battle is at hand.

Father...it is Time.

What is this battle?
This sounds very Celtic to be; the mother of a friend of mine told stories such as this. It is like the battle of the faerie against the invasion of humans... and the last guardian of faerie was left on the Earth to protect it from the human. The last guardian of faerie was named Arafel. This reminds of a verse written by C J Cherryh....



The days of magic were dying, the era of Man had dawned. Yet in one small place the Faery power prevailed, in one quite wood its bright force shone still. For the forest of Ealdwood wove a time different from elsewhere, and amongst its glades and thickets dwelt one with more patience, more pride and more love of the earth than any other being in that troubled world. In the depths of Ealdwood dwelt Arafel, last queen of the Daoine Sidhe...
Reply:Nice
Reply:Sounds like the battle of Christianity vs Paganism, but it's a bit confusing in your poem. The rowan tree has much ancient mythology attached to it among the Celts and the people of northern Europe, but it was also planted in churchyards to ward off evil spirits. Christianity has never been free of superstition. Still, the poem itself draws the reader into the strange and mystical atmosphere of the past before Christianity existed. I've read it several times and keep finding more
Reply:I'm not good at this, but I'll try since i also caught myself reading it over and over, it was very good.

I'm gonna say its a Mother nature fighting off mankind's cruelty/pollutions. Battle of Life
Reply:As for being specific about the name of the battle, I cannot tell you. To me it seems like the battle for life - to go on living or to give up and die and the person narrating is waiting for what will come.
Reply:Father, the ultimate battle is at hand

Mother, I know your pain is real

The people of manufacturing and

other activities are destroying your

land even as we speak and live

for tomorrow may never come again

Father, I beg of you to help save

what is Mother's own to survive.......
Reply:from siddhartha by herman hesse it is the story of a young man who battles with himself between good and evin, $$$ versus the freedom of poverty. inner contemplation and all that stuff.



go pats
Reply:From what the text says it seems to allude to the Crusades.
Reply:My first thought was Camlann but, on re-reading the poem that doesn't seem right. Perhaps Baden Hill? The theme feels Arthurian.
Reply:life over death

addis

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