The Poetry Corner

Sabbat

By Paul Cameron Brown

Picturesque Tituba, steeped in Obeah, in a hairball swoon leads a harangue about witches with some of Salem's more delicate women, obedient children. In verdant outcrops of the imagination fuelled by a beldame's winter fire amid sparks that prance with devils thru tempest gloom covens are conjured so they implicate other pretties with raven hair, arm curled, in desperation, about the moon. With supernatural hands extended the sea is a wretch's bitter vinegar pounding the little, eggshell homes where, at twilight, a dozen village Elders with bell and taper, candlelight and prayer bind parchment oaths to envisage clandestine pacts, sabbats, obscene sojourns. Peculiar cat - straw hat, thatch and loft a drop of blood sputtering then drawn over piddling flame, the well-intentioned righteous demask the pain-fed frightened. Gibbet, arm's length of braided rope - gang-plank, gallow stairs that smirk off into Eternity - a lucky few strangled, the adamant burned, fickle apostates swum on a ducking stool. Ice-fire hearths - bonfire sheaths ravishing the strong carnival veil along pebble-strewn trail.