‘Here be witches’ Introduction
This poem recalls some Anglo-Saxon place names that refer to witches.
Several old English words were often used to refer to a witch (hexe, hexen, haegtesse, hag and calliach). these names morphed over time. Walkern has been included as the name is said to have been chosen by the devil and the last person (Jane Wenham) to be condemned for witchcraft was ducked in the village pond in 1710.
Hekse and hexen, hægtesse and witch,
Since
Saxon times did, our landscape enrich.
Cailleach
kerling,
and hag art the same,
Concealed and hidden,
within a place name.
Valley
of witch's, Hascombe in Surrey,
The hag she sleeps
sound, no need to worry.
Still cleanses the land, no spell need she
sing.
Carlinghow Yorkshire,
the old woman's hill,
Much holly and oak, grows
on the tor still.
Sacred oak grove, noble hag
resting place,
Field names refer to, the
sun and oaks grace.
Two old woman's hills,
there be in Yorkshire,
This one worked iron, did
hag interfere?
Coal pit long since closed,
did kerling obstruct,
Flooded with water, now
village is ducked.
Valley of witches, Hescombe
Somerset,
Both hamlets were lost,
when Black Death they met.
Now only fields on, the ground
to be seen,
Removed without trace, did
hex intervene.
Chosen
by devil, was village Walkern,
Walk
on one and all, and do not return.
The
last witch was ducked, in dark village pond,
Saxon church still stands,
till Jane points her wand.
Hessenford
Cornwall, perhaps witch's ford?
This
village still stands, ye witches ignored.
Beware of those that, thee
can’t tell apart,
For they art adept, at Cornish
dark art.
Copyright January 2012 Andrew Rea
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