By Nectan’s Well

being unnatural
he fixes his sight past the fields
of bere and oat and the woods
of birch, his goat-eyes watch
two worlds at once

he knows to boil henbane with bitter vetch
so he can see what exiled angels
scrawl on the bark of hazels

on the gods’ grave he plants
the ear bones of a raven
they sing to him on sightless nights

he carves a wand from the alder
that lightning woke, and reads
the words it bleeds onto his hands

wand, bones and bark reveal the spell
long ago he saw the place
where Nectan’s Well crouches under knots
he speaks

summoning brings what comes, not what’s called
he fights what he heaves from the earth

he holds it close though it is now
wolf now stag now
snake now crow
now bull now seal
until book
scrabbles from beast

its pages are hot irons in his skull
syllables moult from his tongue
his eyes, unassuming as air
open to the sun

 

 

David Adger is a queer Scottish academic teaching and writing in London. He’s published poetry in And Other Poems, Gutter and Strix, as well as academic work on linguistics.