Tag Archives: mythology

The Sprite’s Tune

The nymph of tomorrow
Portends sorrow,
While the sprite of today
Sounds a doleful lay
On her violin
Of sin.

Round the budding rose
The satyr goes,
Listening to music sad
That will drive him mad.

the sprites continue to play.
There music divine
Does say
“Drink of my wine
Forbidden
And in caverns hidden
We will spend our day”.

The satyr doth long
For wine more strong
Than any taken
Before.
He tastes, and is left forsaken
And forever craving more.

Excess Heat

This excess heat
Will defeat
My erratic thought.
Me caught
Between the desire
For fire
And water.
Yet Poseidon’s daughter
Does cavort
Killing all thought.

Desire
Fire
Water
Daughter.
Forgetfulness in arms
‘Ere the alarms
Of morn
Warn
Of another sultry day
Where man must work, not play.

Swan

The restless wind
calls to the unquiet mind.
I see a swan upon a lake.
A serene
queen
she glides through the water
as some daughter
of the gods.
A man hidden in the reeds
scarcely breathes
for fear
she will notice him near.
The swan sings.
Her song brings
sweet melancholy to his soul.
The whole
scene
he dreamed
awakening to the restless wind
that calls to the unquiet mind.

The Mermaid

“Jump in

and swim.

The water is cold

but the bold

will find gold

in the dank cave

which the brave

mermaid

may explore”.

Mermen adore

the rocky sea floor

and will implore

you to play

as the day

darkens.

The wise mermaid harkens

to the gull

who cries above,

“it is not love.

‘Tis better to stay on the sand warm

than have your heart torn

asunder

by mermen who plunder”.

The waves thunder

And the mermaid does wonder

About gold dust

Lust

And sin.

Do Not Tempt Fate For She Will Always Have The Last Laugh

Do not tempt fate for she will always have the last laugh. This truism was brought home to me on 26 December when I wrote a post entitled “A Good Bath”. In it I described how I had spilled a cup of tea over my laptop’s keyboard. I then went on to poke fate most impolitely by suggesting that my machine appeared to have suffered no ill effects from it’s bath. Fate’s ire was roused and when I next attempted to log on to my laptop the machine’s keyboard refused to work, hence my silence between 27 December and today (30 December 2014).

I did write a post earlier today with the aid of a USB keyboard. However, Fate, still wrathfull owing to my tempting of her caused the laptop to behave erratically. The context menu kept popping up without rhyme or reason and I was forced to abandon my attempt. With due abeysance to the goddess Fate I trust that this post will, in fact go live. I am, incidentally drinking a cup of coffee as I write this with the aid of a USB keyboard (the laptop one being well and truly up the spout). The cup is, however on the carpet well out of harms way!

 

(for my post of 26 December please see, http://newauthoronline.com/2014/12/26/a-good-bath/).

The Responsibility Of Writers

How much responsibility do the creators of literature, we authors have regarding how people choose to interpret and use our writings? A recent report in the UK’s Daily Telegraph reports on a trial in America of 2 12-year-old girls who are charged with the attempted murder of their friend (also aged 12) to please the slender man, a fictional character who is frequently portrayed as abducting children (see http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/10873464/Two-12-year-old-girls-charged-with-trying-to-murder-friend-to-please-Internet-demon.html). It is reported that the girls hoped that by killing their friend they could join the cult of Slender man and reside with him in his mantion.

The Slender Man first appeared on the Something Awful forums in 2008 being the creation of one Eric Nudson and as with so much on the web has gone viral since it’s first appearance, (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slender_Man). Although 2008 appears to constitute the first modern appearance of Slender Man European and other mythologies are full of stories regarding such a character. Creepypasta Wiki is largely devoted to Slender Man as a modern creation (see http://creepypasta.wikia.com/wiki/The_Slender_Man), however the entry acknowledges that the idea of Slender Man dates back for centuries, (for the mythology and culture surrounding Slender Man see http://theslenderman.wikia.com/wiki/Slender_Man_in_Mythology_and_Culture).

The horrific stabbing of a young girl has caused certain individuals to ask whether the presence of online stories regarding the exploits of Slender Man made (or contributed to) the decision of the 2 12-year-olds to attack their friend. It does appear from the reports of the trial that the girls where obsessed with the character of Slender Man and that they had convinced themselves that he was an actual (not fictional) being. I recall as a child being very interested in the description of the use of the guillotine In Dicken’s A Tale of 2 Cities. I recollect playing games with other children in which we pretended to chop off one another’s heads using that fearsome instrument of retribution. However neither I nor any of my playmates ever thought of using a real guillotine. It was, quite simply a game. Had we had access to a real axe I doubt that any of us would have thought to employ it to remove a fellow pupil’s head. For such a horrific incident to have occurred the person doing the axe wielding would have needed to be mentally unstable or to have “temporarily lost it”. Thankfully none of us had access to an axe or similar implement.

The world is full of stories (some of them fairy tales) regarding creatures (human and supernatural) who commit horrific acts of cruelty. Take, for example the story of Bluebeard or that of Hansel and Grettle. Few people call for the banning of such tales on the grounds that a disturbed child could misconstrue them as being real. The overwhelming majority of children pass through childhood without ever seriously considering cooking their peers (as in Hansel and Grettle). In short if we ban or censure Creepypasta Wiki we need to banish much loved fairy tales to the top shelves of book shops well out of the reach of little hands.

What happened in America is a tragedy for everyone concerned but censuring content is not the answer (apart, of course from parents exercising judgement as to what their children can view on and off line and internet forums requiring age verification prior to allowing access to mature content).