Saturday, July 16, 2011

Poetry Prompt #62 - Chants & Charms



When I was a little girl, my English grandmother taught me many old British nursery rhymes and a few chants. Along with Humpty Dumpty, Little Jack Horner, and Jack Sprat, this chant has stayed with me:

“Trefoil, vervain, John’s wort, dill,
hinder witches of their will.”

When I was little, I loved chanting it, singsong style, with Grandma, and I was surprised to encounter it recently in a mystery novel that I was reading. When I Googled the rhyme, I found that it was once believed to act as a countercharm against spells that might do harm, and I found what appears to be its earliest written version in Michael Drayton’s 1627 poem “Nymphidia” (lines 390 & 391) Click Here to Read "Nymphidia" by Michael Drayton

Memories of my grandmother, a dozen or more visits to England over the years, and the old “trefoil, vervain” chant are my inspiration for this week’s prompt. Here it is:

1. Make up your own protective chant that includes herbs or flowers. Use the chant above as a model.  (There’s lots of info about herbs online that might be helpful if you'd like to do some research.)

2. Use your chant in a poem. It may be an epigraph or a first line. It may even be a refrain or the last line. You may address the poem to someone, venture into the world of faerie and create a narrative fantasy, or go in any direction that your poem wants to go.

Sage, verbena, mint, and thyme,
will surely help you with your rhyme!

Make a little magick!


6 comments:

  1. Great idea, Adele!

    Just right for a warm summer afternoon or a moonlight summer night with flowers and herbs scenting the air!

    I take it the clever little rhyme at the end is yours! Your posts are ever so creative! THANK YOU!

    Máire Ó Cathail (Ireland)

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  2. Thanks, Maire!

    So glad you like the prompt.

    It's certainly warm here today - upper 90s (Fahrenheit).

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  3. I need a little magic, Adele. I'm going to try it with some basil! George

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  4. Anonymous George - is that you George Z.?

    Love the comment, whoever sent it!

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  5. Very interesting. It's amazing how little things from childhood can inform the present.

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  6. Thanks for your comment, Bob's Mustangs! Yes, you're right - so many things from childhood continue to inform the present!

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