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Sunday, 16 February 2025

Thin places,by Peter Morford

I had never heard of thin places so, on my walk home from the meeting I thought it was about slimming clinics’ flab-fighting clubs. Of course Google soon put me right with the definition: Thin spaces are those rare locales where the distance between Heaven and Earth collapses.

The article helpfully lists old churches in saintly Cornwall, Iona and of course, Stonehenge. Go there, they say, and you will feel a special contentment and peace as you cross the line between Heaven and Earth; from our mundane world to what may be the mythical or mystical. We too enjoy a sense of peace. Conversely, we may feel uneasy when the place reminds us of things we would rather forget.

Let’s say we’re friends walking in some beautiful place. Cardingmill Valley will do. We have the scenery, the peace, the good company and the prospect of a nice bowls of soup at the end of the walk. We’re in a haze of happiness and, if we’re wise, we tell each other how much we’re enjoying ourselves.

Or, you are relaxed in your armchair, dozing over a book. You’re brought to life by the first bars of a favourite symphony or a line of poetry, It works magic on you and, as your eyes close, you are out of this world into happy memories and imaginings.

Buildings have their own atmosphere. Ancient churches or deserted theatres encourage sombre or respectful thoughts which may or may not be religious. Faced with a work of art can, and should, make us wonder about the artist and the world he lived in.

Descend to a dungeon and think about what it represents. Sixty feet above us in the Great Hall are the carousing gentry. Down here are the tortured and starving. The very stones are a record of the past.

We ask who were the people who built this monument, painted this picture, wrote this music? Who lived in this ancient ruin when it was intact? What was here in this barren desert a million years ago? If there were sentient beings around when this mighty mountain was jacked up to 10,000 metres, what did they think was happening?

Astronauts seeing Earth from space feel a spiritual force. Their emotions are a mixture of pride over Man’s achievement tempered with modesty at our insignificance to the whole.

Meanwhile there are those who follow Aldous Huxley’s advice to enjoy the false delights of mescalin.

Religions attribute all the good things to their god or gods. Agnostics think they are being realistic as they say that theists accept what they are told because it saves them the effort of thinking for themselves. If they did exercise their minds they might find that rather than “God created Man,” it was the other way round. Religions and deities are a human invention; indications of our natural curiosity, ingenuity and inventiveness as we try to understand the Universe and our place in it.

Like our ancestors I gaze at the firmament and doubt that is anything to do with religion. I just wonder..

Friday, 7 February 2025

Banishing, by Sharanya Manivannan


Never forget that once invoked
a goddess cannot go away
until asked to.
Leave your door open to me three
nights in a row and the circle will
come complete with me within it,
and in your rooms the smell of
sweet burning things.
Cover your mirrors, you who
cannot bear to look at yourself.
Rub sugar and spice over your doorway.
Bury your precious stones in ash.
Prepare for poltergeists.
Wash your body of the salt of
my fire eater’s tongue, black as
prophecy. Exorcise from your memory
the distant thunder of my voice.
Night bleeding into light,
the last crow before the sacrifice.
Make your offerings. Wood to oil, oil to flame.
I am more benevolent than most. Draw me
the outline of a door and I will withdraw, quietly.
I will not walk backwards. In your house,
not a shudder, no trace for days
but a relieved exhalation.
It is not what I will take;
it is what I will leave behind.

Sunday, 2 February 2025

Gerry's journey, by Peter Shilston

(This is a vivid dream I had, which ended at this point. I don't know what might have happened next) 

..................................................................................................

The little group of travellers made their way along the mountain track, following their leaders, the old greybearded wizard and the tall, beautiful Elven lady. They were Gerry and these two, whom he regarded as his close companions (though in truth he had only met them at the start of the journey), three other characters whom I somehow could never see clearly, and a strange young man who had joined them later. He was most inappropriately dressed, in a suit and tie, and clutched obsessively at a briefcase, which he refused to put down even when they stopped for a rest.

   They crossed the mountains and came to a wide valley, where there was a farm. They laid down in a field. It was a dry and warm night and they soon fell asleep.
   Gerry awoke before the others. The wizard and the lady went to consult the farmer, and Gerry explored behind a barn, where he found water to wash himself. When he rejoined the others, he looked through his bag and was astonished at the random collection of objects he had packed for the journey. Why on earth had he brought a wineglass? "And I only have one clean shirt!" he exclaimed. "What will I do when I meet the King?"
   "You'll have to wash it!" replied one of the others, and laughed.

   The wizard and the lady returned. "It seems the Wolf isn't far away", he told them. "We will have to overcome it - or tame it".
   The lady turned to him. "The success of our mission will depend on my death." she announced quietly. The wizard said nothing, for he knew that she could discern far into the future.
   After a long silence, she repeated, "My death", but then added, fiercely, "But I will not be bound by fate!"
   The strange young man with the briefcase now approched the wizard. "I must go back!" he said.
   "You cannot go back", he was told, "When we crossed the mountains, we entered another world. There can be no return".
   The young man said, "I was carrying drugs to be delivered. But when I looked in my case, there were no drugs: just twists of newspaper containing only sand!"
   "That too is fate", the wizard told him.