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All articles filed in poetry

Ars Magica Librivox Podcast transcriptsFebruary 28, 2025

Ghosts from Lancastrian Ballads: Sir Gualter and his lady

Our second ghostly visitant from Lanacastrian Ballads: this is a pair of ghosts, of which the unnamed lady is the more interesting. She’s linked to a lightning tree, which are sometimes sought out by magi as useful for enchantment. She may have powers related to the weather or may be strangely transformed into a dryad,…

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Podcast transcriptsDecember 27, 2024December 27, 2024

Fragment week: The Flowers of Evil

Fragment weeks are where I use up ideas that I know have value in Ars but can’t quite land. Sometime others in the community find excellent ways to use them. Here I’m presenting some of the poems from The Flowers of Evil by Baudelaire. As I think about them I keep circling back to the…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsMarch 19, 2024

Allingham and the Fear of Little Men

I was first taught this poem in primary school. It was in the standard English textbook, to explain what adjectives were. I thought I knew it. I only knew the first and last verses. The child abduction in the middle verses would have caused parental concern. Children getting lost in the bush is one of…

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Ars Magica Librivox Podcast transcriptsFebruary 24, 2024

The Dead Men of Pest from “Poems Original and Translated” by John Herman Merivale

We’ve been getting a heap of useful material out of decadent and romantic poets, so let’s continue. John Merivale was part of Lord Byron’s social circle, and this poem is about a vampiric plague in Pest, which is one of the three cities that merged to form modern Budapest in Hungary. The following recording was…

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Ars MagicaJanuary 17, 2024January 31, 2024

The Dark Angel by Lionel Johnson

Lionel Johnson was a decadent poet, and we’ve had some luck with those before, which is why we are fishing in his waters. He was part of Oscar Wilde’s set, indeed. He was the person who introduced Oscar Wilde to Lord Alfred Douglas, the young man who legally speaking, he debauched, leading to Wilde’s imprisonment,…

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Ars Magica Librivox Magonomia Podcast transcriptsJanuary 14, 2024January 31, 2024

Nympholepts

This week Mystery Cults and Nympholepts. Time for some more Swinburne, the excellentdecadent author who gave us the Lady of Pain and her cephalopodus servants. A nympholept is a person who is inducted into a religio-magical mystery by a powerful spirit. The name comes from The Odyssey where Odysseus is taught transformations by Circe. I…

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