Cista Mystica

Cista Mystica No more tame language about wild things. Publishing the work and ideas of Dr Martin Shaw. A press for our times. Venture into the marvellous.
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Mythopoetics, romanticism, philosophy, magic, folklore, initiatory encounters with wilderness.

ROBERT BLY & LEONARD LEWISOHN ON HAFEZ Here's a great treat for all you poetry lovers. What a long lasting joy this even...
01/07/2024

ROBERT BLY & LEONARD LEWISOHN ON HAFEZ
Here's a great treat for all you poetry lovers. What a long lasting joy this evening was. This is the final section of a longer adventure Robert and others had led.

Please consider sharing far and wide.

An unforgettable evening, recorded on September 13th 2008 at St. James's Church, Piccadilly, celebrating Robert & Leonard's translations of Hafez, and public...

Brand new free essay and audio: RETURN TO THE MERRIE
30/06/2024

Brand new free essay and audio: RETURN TO THE MERRIE

A Green Chapel For Our Times

TO FALL BEAUTIFULLY FROM THE EDGE OF THE WORLD:  An evening with DR MARTIN SHAW St Mary's, Totnes.August 15th,, £15.Accl...
29/06/2024

TO FALL BEAUTIFULLY FROM THE EDGE OF THE WORLD: An evening with DR MARTIN SHAW
St Mary's, Totnes.
August 15th,, £15.

Acclaimed storyteller and author Martin Shaw brings an evening of stories and ideas to St Mary’s. Drawing extensively from both poetic and biblical sources, Shaw addresses the fatigue and indifference many feel towards Christianity.

There seems to be a deficit of imagination often present in its messaging. A God that is born a fugitive and dies an outlaw - then possessing the Tricksterish capacity to return – is worthy of a greater attention than we may be giving.

Dr Martin Shaw is the author of seventeen books, including Bardskull, Book of the Day in The Guardian and described as “rich and transgressive” by the Sunday Times. An Eastern Orthodox Christian, he has introduced thousands of modern people to the mysteries of ancient myths. He publishes weekly his popular Substack, The House of Beasts & Vines.

All proceeds from this evening will go to the restoration and renewal project at St. Mary's

TICKETS AT:

https://ttm.churchsuite.com/events/w8ebiypp

Please consider sharing

🔥Martin's conversation on Gawain & The Green Knight – now available to listen on the Backlisted Podcast: https://www.bac...
27/06/2024

🔥Martin's conversation on Gawain & The Green Knight – now available to listen on the Backlisted Podcast: https://www.backlisted.fm/episodes/214

*

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is the subject of this episode of Backlisted.

Dr Martin Shaw and Dr Laura Varnam (hwaet Laura!) join Andy and John to discuss this late 14th-century chivalric romance - or subversion thereof - written in Middle English alliterative verse, author unknown.

We discuss the poem's chequered history and a variety of translations by Simon Armitage, J.R.R. Tolkien, Marie Borroff and Dr Shaw himself. We also take a look at some of the film, TV and radio adaptations of the poem, the most recent of which is The Green Knight (2021), starring Dev Patel.

This show was recorded in front of a live audience at Foyles in Charing Cross Road, London, on 12th June 2024. Locklisted subscribers will be able to hear more Gawain chat next weekend, including some terrific contributions and questions from members of the audience. In other words, it's a bumper bonus Backlisted bonanza from the blokes and broads who brought you Beowulf.

LISTEN HERE: https://www.backlisted.fm/episodes/214

I am turning my mind inside out and back to front thinking about Gawain & The Green Knight. By the time you read this I ...
16/06/2024

I am turning my mind inside out and back to front thinking about Gawain & The Green Knight. By the time you read this I will have been at Foyles bookshop with the Backlisted podcast. I have been sniffing around translations (I’ll be talking about Tolkien's, and will post here when released) and listening to some radically different tellings I’ve given over the last two years. I’ve bashed around with it in Canada and Ireland and England and it still feels utterly fresh.

But today, it’s the Green Knight that’s suddenly wrestled me off my horse. With no conscious thought whatsoever I found myself scrawling in my notes:

Shamanically Christian

Collision is the Master’s Method

Me and some friends gather on a Wednesday night and walk the gauntlet of daring to read the gospels out loud. It’s a furtive, risky experience; it dares pain, discomfort, and great rushes of emotion. It doesn’t have the florid seductions of many myths I love, it’s – as a man said to me last week – bloodied rags of language. It’s some stark material, right there. It’s not rolling out a red carper to make us feel groovy. It’s the good news that arrives with dismay.

Somewhere in John, as things start to get heavy and Yeshua has switched from pithy Galilee stories to big, mad Jerusalem statements about just who he really is, he or John or the Holy Spirit as editor basically say: you can’t handle the light I offer because it makes you feel so exposed.

I haven’t been able to breathe right since...

https://martinshaw.substack.com/p/collision-is-the-masters-method

And a Breton Fairy Tale

Word in from Martin of a gathering fit for Camelot at Foyles Charing Cross Road London last night. Talking GAWAIN & THE ...
13/06/2024

Word in from Martin of a gathering fit for Camelot at Foyles Charing Cross Road London last night. Talking GAWAIN & THE GREEN KNIGHT with Dr Laura Varnam, John Mitchinson & Andy Miller for the Backlisted Podcast. Keep your eyes and ears peeled for the conversation as a Backlisted Live episode. Complete with a reading from BARDSKULL 💀🔥 https://unbound.com/books/bardskull

There was an interesting response to part one of this essay on s*x, thanks for chiming in on such a volatile subject. In...
09/06/2024

There was an interesting response to part one of this essay on s*x, thanks for chiming in on such a volatile subject. In this second section I’m going to turn to a fairy tale.

There are many versions of The Red Shoes, but it basically tells of a young girl without much money who is entranced by a pair of red shoes she sees a princess wearing. They are so different to the heavy black shoes that everyone tramps in and out of church with. They all seem so serious, so weighed down. Through various kindnesses she gets a similar pair of red shoes.

One day outside the church she meets a man returning from a great war, far away. He has a long white beard and very bright eyes. He starts to play a fiddle. While others disapprove, he coos and simpers over the girl’s shoes, even asking her to give him a little twirl, a little dance. Feeling shamed by the churchgoers and affirmed by his gaze, she starts to dance. For a while it’s quite wonderful, even liberating. She twirls past the villagers, round the graves, laughing and in wild excitement. She hollers and pirouettes, all the time with the old man playing his fiddle and making her feel seen. For a few minutes this is quite the spectacle, but after a while, the crowd grow bored, gather their kids and go home for Sunday dinner.

Point made, the laughing girl tries to stop dancing and finds she can’t. As the panic grows in her eyes, this excites the old man even more. He starts to play faster and leads her out of the graveyard and onto the moors and through the woods. For many hours she splashes through streams and over hills, growing more and more crazed, more exhausted. Under a full moon she spasms and twists as the fiddling man keeps pace. The ecstasy has descended into nightmare, the passion into enchantment. Her feet are bleeding and somehow twined to the shoes.

Finally she dances into the arms of an angel who frees her from the ghastly parade and liberates her feet. The old man melts away into the trees. The angel washes her feet in a stream and over time she recovers. She is never going to wear those big heavy black shoes of the others, but she finds gentler, sweeter rhythms to move to. When she wants to stop, she simply sits down and takes her handmade shoes off.

*

This story has several clear messages. One is that a church that’s too leaden, lacks curiosity or any sense of wonder is always going to cause a reverse response, a red shoes move. A log tends to float to the surface, no matter how many times you push it underwater. Some of us have attended churches with little playfulness and plenty of judgement. There’s only so many tuts, sighs and scoldings a young soul can tolerate before those red shoes may look awfully tempting. The second message of the story is the clear peril of putting on the shoes. With a rebel yell we commit to whatever the thrill is and wherever it may be taking us. It would display almost a lack of character not to do so. It likely has no particular malice to it but suddenly we are swimming into waters with far deeper currents than we may imagine.

My early life as a musician enabled almost unlimited contact with people swept up in a red shoes life. Dancing to the tune often had you dead before thirty, and in some ghastly fashion that was seen as rather credible. Rock’n’roll eats its young. There but for the grace of God go I. Before I started to write this, I dug out a photograph of my first proper band––one that toured and made records. All dead apart from one guy and me, and men that would only be in their early fifties had they survived. Chaos is fetishized, disorder iconized, and we wonder why life seems so terribly combustible. And yes, into the confused and sometimes thrilling environment was plenty of s*x, plenty of drugs, plenty of attempts at some florid form of ecstasy. In more brutal versions of the story, the girl meets not an angel but villagers, who, at her prompting, cut her feet off to stop the dance. She is now crippled but safe, being wheeled in and out of church for the rest of her life, chastened but wiser. This grotesque scenario just exaggerates further the juxtaposition of rabid licentiousness and morbid ideas of purity. There is a distinct lack of imagination in both forms of acting out.

In old Christian language red shoes would indicate what’s called the passions. Passion can be a confusing word. In this context it’s not so much an abiding enthusiasm, but something addictive. The passions tend to have us, not the other way around. The passions could be gluttony, pride or promiscuity, laziness or envy, that kind of thing. In their way they pull us from the kind of reality God offers. They stop us from being free. Some of the passions enable us a sense of drama and excitement, whilst others function as a sedative, but all are enchantments. Food of itself can be a wonder, intimacy a joy, a sense of accomplishment worthy, but what we then do with them is where we need to be watchful.

A passion for music can harden into an addiction to applause, a passion for lo******ng can cheapen into addiction for s*xual relief. From a mythic way of looking at it, an overriding addiction would be a demon. A demon being something that wants us to not to be liberated, not to cleave to heaven in this life. It’s a word for an energy that does not wish you well. And a very wily thing to do is to make us think we are ever freer as our addictions get an even further hold.

So what do we do?...

https://martinshaw.substack.com/p/on-s*x-dancing-with-the-passions

Part Two

I ask him to tell me a dream and the veteran’s distressed. High colour, heavy set, hands tapping knees, a light sheen of...
26/05/2024

I ask him to tell me a dream and the veteran’s distressed. High colour, heavy set, hands tapping knees, a light sheen of sweat, he’d rather be anywhere but here. But he has no distance left to run. The diets don’t work, the therapy doesn’t work, even the bible isn’t working. Nothing will work because Jeff has a secret. A story. Unsaid words that have been eating him up from the inside for almost fifty years. There was a war in the East that Jeff never came back from. But today, finally, the story’s going to get told. The whole sprawling extraordinary mess of it. In a hut in the backwoods of Minnesota a taboo will get broken. Jeff will say the thing he cannot say. I tell the small group of veterans that we won’t be stopping for supper until the story’s done. Late summer light slants through the window and lands in the circle between us, dust suddenly visible.

Ruth is sitting with her back against a rowan tree in a Dartmoor forest. She’s talking about the r**e she endured at fourteen as if it happened to someone else. The Godawful horror’s been told so often it’s taken on a literary polish. I listen and prod the fire. I then ask her to tell the story in a way she’s never done before. Not for the podcast listeners or Ted Talk. Not as a motivational speech about overcoming adversity. No, tell it like a fairy tale. Tell it in the third person. Something unexpected happens when you do that. Something beyond your own imaginative choreography. She tells the story in this way: Once upon a time, at the end of her childhood, a young woman found herself lost in the forest. Suddenly tears fall like rain. She stays with it, gasping and occasionally silenced but valiantly holding the thread. And, at the end, I ask her the old storytime question––and what happened next? Suddenly the earth is ancient and listening closely to her.

I’m driving Gary back to his house on a Plymouth council estate. He’s off drugs, off servicing men behind the bus station, out of the gang his brother runs. But only just, these things being a magnet he keeps floating towards. Sometimes he wants to talk to me about his life, sometimes not, and the change can be in a fraction of a second. Last time we did he threatened to hurl himself into the fast-moving current of a river we were passing. But today’s different, today he wants a story. I tell him a tale about a girl leaving a village for good and not one pair of eyes is on her wishing her well. At this he moans for a bit, rocks a bit, then makes a grab for the gear stick, tries to uproot it from the stem and bring the car off the road. I pull over and he starts pummelling his own head. Get it out of my head, he says. Get the story away from me, it’s in me, I don’t like it, what have you done? This from a young man who watches horror p**n and plays war games on an almost hourly rotation. A tiny folk tale has unearthed something in its terrible simplicity that’s gone straight to his heart. That’s me, the girl is me, no one, no one, is looking out for me. I hug him for a moment, and tell him, I am. To get to you, they have to come through me. He cries then opens the car door.

It’s January, and it’s dark. A great blast of freezing air gallops into the car. For a moment he’s lit up under a streetlamp before darting into the shadows. I will never see him again.

As I say, I collect thrown away stories.

I don’t know if I’ve always done it, but I seem to have a nose for unearthing things that people wish to abandon or swerve from. You see there’s no one in this whole wide world that isn’t carrying a story. You could be a president, a yoga teacher, a ju**ie and you have this one completely unique thing in your pocket. Your story. It may be crumpled like a bus ticket or writ large on tablets of stone, but it’s yours. And god almighty you need to tell it, to rest in it, to find some peace with it. You may realise this at twenty or ninety, but one day you’ll realise it.

The question is, is your relationship to that story transactional or transformational? Is it useful to others?...

https://martinshaw.substack.com/p/thrown-away-stories

Parzival, (Parts Six & Seven)

LONDON! LIVE! FOYLES! GAWAIN & THE GREEN KNIGHT, JUNE 12TH, 6:30-8:30PM. Can't wait. Tickets at link:
15/05/2024

LONDON! LIVE! FOYLES! GAWAIN & THE GREEN KNIGHT, JUNE 12TH, 6:30-8:30PM. Can't wait. Tickets at link:

The much-loved Backlisted podcast returns to Foyles Charing Cross Road for the second instalment in a very special live series of the show. John and Andy are joined this June by guest speaker

A VISION FOR A MONASTERYOk. The rather earnest title is for a straightforward situation. My friend the iconographer Aida...
09/05/2024

A VISION FOR A MONASTERY

Ok. The rather earnest title is for a straightforward situation. My friend the iconographer Aidan Hart has been deeply involved in an Orthodox hermitage in Shropshire these last thirty years. He’s done all sorts of incredibly hard yards getting it into shape and creating a small absolutely stunning fresco chapel. The last monk left about a year ago, and they are low on funds for the monthly bills. Last week I took a trip up with Aidan into the Shropshire hills to behold it. It’s a Grail jewel, I tell thee.

Some brass tacks: It’s likely they will have to sell and it’s priced at a pretty reasonable £350k. I think it needs about £75k in tender loving care. It would need big-hearted volunteers and a few professionals to have it ready by next spring.

It has almost twenty acres and a decent pond. Aidan has planted thousands of trees, with bluebells erupting under them in the spring. It’s ferociously beautiful, untamed. It’s like Tolkien had a pint with St Mary of Egypt and they dreamt this up.

Every now and then something comes along that is both thrilling and alarming in equal measure, and this would be that. The thrill is that I can see a very clear picture of what could be a new season for the place. In short, I’d like to buy it. Because I feel prompted to do so.

What’s alarming is that wonderful things, rare things, things of real merit, often send us far out from the usual comforts. This I know from experience.

My seeing would be this: the small monastery would become a Christian centre with an Orthodox core. We would run courses, enable vigils and retreats in the woods (there are several cells), have the joyful labour of stewarding of the land, maybe a wee bit of a small holding. We’d have volunteers coming through in the summer and winter seasons, and likely a rotation of permanent staff.

Groups would probably be smaller than I’ve worked with for some time, and I would bring in all sorts of friends to teach – many of whom you’d know already. Summer would have monthly courses and space to camp, winter would naturally be more contemplative, with likely longer retreats with relatively modest-sized groups. It’s wild up there: to process through the snow by candlelight to attend a midnight service in the chapel, well there’s no words really.

I have a feeling that there’s a great deal in the lives of the early saints that are talking to us right now – in a time of tremendous spiritual peril. This would be a place where we are not just thinking about their lives but actually get to walk in their footsteps a little. Holy Spirit goes where he wills, with not so much attention to which century he’s in. This would be no kind of re-enactment fair but a jump into the big and rare adventure bequeathed to us. I am very interested in the liturgical year and how we could creatively dwell within it.

I have decades of experience as a storyteller and teacher that I’d like to offer as we lean into the embers of rehydrating the Christian mythos. I’ve led a community for twenty-one years, conferences, endless courses academic and otherwise. But I can’t do this alone. I’d be hoping for fledgling storytellers, growers, iconographers, soup kitcheners, artists, writers, thinkers, mechanics, musicians, gardeners, scientists and boat builders to get inspired, even created in such a place with God’s help.

Important and exciting detail:

The WIFI’s terrible and there’s barely a phone signal.

I don’t have the money to buy it outright, or I would. I’m looking for folks with deep pockets and resources to help. I don’t want to be fundraising for the next ten years or asking you to send me the family silver, please don’t, God bless you. But if you think you can substantially assist (or know an organisation that can) in this rare adventure, please write to me direct via:

[email protected]

We would only have a few months to get this together, and there will be other bids I’m sure, but it’s my Christian duty to have a crack at it. It may be God has entirely different plans for it, in which case I will cheer them heartily on.

But I can’t keep talking about Camelot then ignore it when it actually turns up.

Please consider sharing.

More details & a conversation between Martin & Aidan: https://martinshaw.substack.com/p/a-vision-for-a-monastery

“Unfurl the sails, and let God steer us where He will.” St Bede the Venerable A glimpse of the chapel Listen to the audio of this post, A Vision For A Monastery: Hello friends, Ok. The rather earnest title is for a straightforward situation. My friend the iconographer Aidan Hart has been deeply ...

t's a year since I was on the road in Canada - the only plan each night was no plan. The second to last evening was film...
08/05/2024

t's a year since I was on the road in Canada - the only plan each night was no plan. The second to last evening was filmed and is now available to live stream at the link. This is a lovely little video Ian Mackenzie made about the adventure. To stream go here: https://www.schoolofmythopoetics.com/codes-livestream
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgBrSiTs-HQ

In May 2023, we brought celebrated storyteller Dr. Martin Shaw right across Canada - from Nova Scotia all the way to Vancouver Island. It was a grand time of...

Happy Easter my friends - I'm in a tradition that celebrates a little later. There's a new audio and written essay here ...
05/05/2024

Happy Easter my friends - I'm in a tradition that celebrates a little later. There's a new audio and written essay here on something I've always struggled with: prayer. If it's useful to you, please consider passing it on. Good cheer, M.

Photo Baz Ratner “At some time we should make the decision to enter the divine darkness of the Jesus prayer, which is Mount Sinai or Mount Tabor, which is where we will meet God.” Archimandrite Hierotheos Vlachos It’s always the vulnerability that strikes me. The closing of my eyes, the shifti...

It’s not an indulgence to go walkabout. It loosens up habit, unblocks our ears, lets all sorts of concealments float to ...
28/04/2024

It’s not an indulgence to go walkabout. It loosens up habit, unblocks our ears, lets all sorts of concealments float to the surface. It exposes. I ‘hear’ here in a way that I don’t surrounded by clocks and screens and chat, the edges of the tent have more freedom to wrestle with the wind. I would be thirty years into adherence to this practice. The vigils, the years in the tent, all re-openings of the fontanel. Picking at the dark bread these experiences offer. They do tend to change the life you return to, working to a differing frequency as they do, and most of us squat in the tension of the prophetic and the pastoral: how do we negotiate the forest epiphany and how that may or may not eventually become a village wisdom. I’ve often called this entering the Bone-House. Almost by necessity, ways of talking about that can seem distinctly circuitous: sometimes called twisted language in storytelling form. You are both disclosing and protecting something simultaneously: something you may have never seen before.

Campbell used to say, the role of the community is to torture the mystic to death. Depends on the community I would say, though he has a point. Oh for the wider clan tapestry to sew your emerging vision into...

https://martinshaw.substack.com/p/we-are-ceremony-people

Inis Oirr, (Part Four-Final)

Hello friends, It’s been a grand week in Devon, a slowing of the wagon and stabling of the horse. Just losing myself in ...
21/04/2024

Hello friends, It’s been a grand week in Devon, a slowing of the wagon and stabling of the horse. Just losing myself in the various chores of keeping the home ticking over. It’s certainly spring now and I can feel the land readying itself for a big old burst of life. ‘The moors are preggers’ as the Bards would say. There’s a seagull balancing on the mossy cross in the churchyard and there’s an ocean-tang on the breeze.

*

In literature it is only the wild that attracts us. Dullness is but another name for tameness. It is the uncivilised free and wild thinking in “Hamlet” and the “Iliad”, in all the Scriptures and Mythologies, not learned in the schools, that delights us. - Henry Thoreau

Places are going swiftly on The Skinboat & The Star now: I’m delighted to leave a short film here, Wild Christ created by Natasha Kozaily, who I’m collaborating with on a series of works. You’ll see her distinct talent and fresh weave of image and composition, threaded with the words. It captures the sense of excitement building for the programme, the sense of re-beholding an old, old story.

We talked about the Wild Christ phrase. There were a few caveats, but in the end it seemed to evoke a feeling encountered in many conversations in the last year, with all sorts of people. Not feral, not slovenly, but wild in the most elevated sense of the word. Something not easily domesticated, nor bent only to the civic. It is a wild, refreshing energy some of us are encountering. His compassion is unsettling, his miracles mind-boggling, his claims divisive. Since he’s occupied my home everything looks and feels different. There’s vines growing in through windows that never quite close.

*

A note for local folks. Backalong is an opportunity for me to try out new stories and ideas. Strange and beguiling scraps and dreams. A few disasters. It could be a Dartmoor tale, Inuit poetry, whatever is pushing my imagination along at that second. Unpolished, some told, some read, whatever emerges. Likely by the time you read this the tickets will be gone (it’s a diminutive tap room we’re squeezing into), but if there’s a good feeling I will likely do more, and probably find a bigger spot. I’ll record them, and if they have enough crackle I will leave them here exclusively for paid subscribers. Backalong is a Westcountry way of saying myth-time.

Anyhow, let’s find our way back to the journey of Parzival. For those of you finding this or my Inis Oirr essays heavy going don’t worry––this too will pass. I will strike some pithier notes soon enough. Further out and further in!...

Parzival, (Part Three)

Morning friends, as you read this I will be likely driving the dusty hire car down from Liverpool to Devon at the end of...
19/04/2024

Morning friends, as you read this I will be likely driving the dusty hire car down from Liverpool to Devon at the end of the tour with my pal Glen. Everything gets a little ragged in the final week of a tour, the ziz-zag miles across country pile up. And yet there was a lot of joy in it. In Brighton I saw Tommy Tiernan deliver the greatest set of story-comedy I’ve ever seen, and I rediscovered the redemptive power of the late night kebab. I’m not doing much leaving of Devon for the next six months now, and will be diving even deeper into the mysteries we’re exploring here at Beast & Vines. I’m very grateful for our fellowship. It refreshes. Good cheer warmly to all. On my return I’m going to cook my own food, light the fire, feed the cats, uncork a bottle, fire up the sauna. Just. A few. More. Miles.

Ok, back to the Island.

*

Carry the thing that is too heavy. Take the weight somewhere it’s never been. Get used to it.

I’m thinking about Micheál, and his dog. Micheál, from the plane ride over. Every night I’m carrying that feckin’ boulder, round and round. There’s a few days just like that. But now it’s day six. No wind. Blue sky. Even kids’ voices outside the window. Kids just looning about. Glorious little nutters. There’s a hound barking. It’s a different island out there. There’s been a definite shift. I slide into my Levi’s, boots and tweed and am out the door, not even stopping for a bite. I strike left on a boreen I’ve not taken before. I’m just yomping without a plan, just following my hound nose.

And then this happens....

Inis Oirr, (Part Three)

Hello my friends, you find me hunkered down in London town, sipping coffee around halfway through this UK and Scotland t...
07/04/2024

Hello my friends, you find me hunkered down in London town, sipping coffee around halfway through this UK and Scotland tour with my good pal the superlative Glen Hansard. It’s been 100% delight to drive the lanes with him, yabbering away, then out onto the stage a few hours later. A good life. I’m off to Divine Liturgy in Kensington now, but I’m pleased to leave here a recently recorded conversation with Mark Vernon, and our main event, part two of Parzival...

Conversation with Mark Vernon, Strangeness is the New Real: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dYFe58OW0wQ&t=3s

(Part Two)

Hello my friends, as promised we have a few weeks of the Epic of Parzival as our Sunday Story. I wrote Snowy Tower, my b...
24/03/2024

Hello my friends, as promised we have a few weeks of the Epic of Parzival as our Sunday Story. I wrote Snowy Tower, my book of the story, ten years ago, and have been asked many times to read the story out loud. Well, finally, for you, here it is, on the below audio.

This first part of the story reveals Parzival’s mother Queen Herzeloyde refusing to marry for anything but love, radical in the times. When her husband is killed, she takes her son off into the forest to know nothing of becoming a knight and hence risking his life. However, destiny comes calling...

https://martinshaw.substack.com/p/sunday-stories-parzival

(Part One)

Friends - I spent ten days of January on a remote Irish island. These next few UnDeceiving posts are an account of quite...
17/03/2024

Friends - I spent ten days of January on a remote Irish island. These next few UnDeceiving posts are an account of quite what happened.

These are LONG pieces and you may prefer to listen to me reading, which can be found at the bottom of the essay.

There is also news that from next week – leading into the Easter period – I will be reading the entire story of Parzival as a series of Sunday Stories (as requested). This Grail epic can be found in my book Snowy Tower. Early spring is the perfect time for this story.

Finally, many of you will by now have received news of The Skin-Boat & The Star (https://martinshaw.substack.com/p/a-new-direction), my new teaching programme beginning this September – I’m delighted to say that Iain McGilchrist will also be joining the ranks of distinguished guest speakers setting out on this endeavour.

Onwards.



And it fears me sair, my good maister,

There’s a tempest out at sea.

Childe Ballad

I am dancing goose-wild on January limestone, I dance clean out of my civic drabness, my strained theatre, my expedient manoeuvring. Let those skins fall like feathers around me. I dance into the essential, the vital and the archaic. Stuff ye if ye don’t understand.

A rock grows in a certain way; it has the sun and the rain endorsing and belittling it. It takes its form by staring hard into centuries, weather, cattle p**s. But there’s another side to the rock. Its underside. That has other information in its curvature.

The rocks inside me have been turned, all at once. What was off stage, hidden, unknown even to me, is now on stage. This is an adjustment. There’s only so much darkness you can eat in one sitting.

I am on the Aran Islands. Next stop is Hy-Brazil that mystical isle, and far beyond that the Eastern Abenacki, Pequawket, Mohawk, Pawtucket, Shawnee, Meskwaki. Today all I see is an unimaginably vast stretch of water ahead, with a great sheaf of limestone under my pale bare feet. I am singing in bad-Irish, with lots of stops and starts. I am trying to become a real human being...

https://martinshaw.substack.com/p/the-undeceiving-pilgrimage

Inis Oirr, (Part One)

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Dartmoor
Dartmoor

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A new venture in publishing.

No more tame language about wild things.

Cista Mystica Press is established to publish the work and ideas of Dr. Martin Shaw, and a select group of authors. Its concerns range from mythopoetics, romanticism, philosophy, magic, folklore to initiatory encounters with wilderness. The press believes that eros can be the bedfellow of rigour, and that all these areas have something essential to contribute to the state of our times.

The Cista Mystica was a secret casket used in the mystery cults of antiquity, particularly in the rites of Dionysus. Contained within on a bed of rushes was a snake, the living god itself, utterly untameable.