Anyway, of course Baba Yaga in any incarnation never has & never will be canonized, but I still wish she was my patron. & so I imagine her as grandmother and protector, dispelling the myths spread to slander her, grinding the patriarchy to a pulp in that mortar & pestle.
i)
baba yaga is my grandmother,
baking bread by morning:
she kneads her mottled heart,
offers it to the oven: all day it rises,
each pulse powering
the bellows that set the forest
breathing, her avian hut
slowly stirring with the day.
she works, and works, arms a
a sinewy genealogy, layers of onion-skin
windowing over veins tracing paths,
remembering: a loaf for my mother,
and my mother’s mother, one for my
grandfather and another for the birds.
late afternoon, she shakes out her linens,
magpie wings as she flutters out, all
walnut-kneed and juniper-eyed,
from tree-tops she watches winter sun
soak the river fiery, turn the coals
in the dark furnace of her woods.
ii)
baba yaga is my grandmother,
even though she has no children.
those she shirked retort
that she’s just a spinster, a
dessicated pestle-pusher
but i have seen the red rider
leaving hoofprints in the yard
at dawn, & her corvid voice creaking
& lilting as she gathers herbs,
smirking:
don’t tell your mother
i’ve been teaching you bawdy songs!
iii)
baba yaga is my grandmother,
although no one believes it.
she’s not even a woman,
they scoff. village men say
she drinks the blood of livestock,
devours our children! robs
every nest, corrupts them, crazed
barren woman, bitter and unfed;
look at her fence! they cry,
(mistaking brambles for ribcages,
silver birches for weathered bones.)
they never remember
how all the women call for her,
have her cure their difficult infants,
coax them down that red-poppied
path, spin their linens, save their lives.
the men scorn, but she knows
their need, & how in times of
desperation they remember
that psha krev dog’s blood
is just a curse for a burned hand.
iv)
baba yaga is my grandmother
& also probably my great-grandmother.
those skeletons? she says,
those are my only relatives:
they said, bury me here, baba,
i will be fodder for your sunflowers,
i want asters & yarrow to blossom
from the hollows of my eyes!
baba shakes her head,
a handful of rich dark earth
in her fingers: everything we eat,
you know, is of the dead.
v)
baba yaga is my grandmother,
bright forest inside of me:
& they said she is death
but i know it’s more dangerous
to create
with a mortar with a spindle
with a sharp flint spark!
to crush harm like poppyseeds
into numb paste on your tongue –
forget the macabre lanterns,
she says, you won’t need them
in the dark:
every night she sends me off as
my own talisman,
my whole skull blazing with light.
3 comments:
well, as always, i love the images described in your work. it's nice to think of baba yaga as a misunderstood old grandmother, instead of a vicious child-eating monster. kind of fitting. i adore it.
thank you!
i've always believed (even as a young child) that she was unfairly portrayed... like lots of mythological ladies in countries which later converted to patriarchal religions, her persona was adapted to fit with the agenda of the time.
i really see it as no different than how old conservative men with power enjoy spreading hysteria about feminism... what's the infamous pat robertson about how feminism makes ladies "leave their husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism and become lesbians" or some such tripe?
baba yaga = husbandless (therefore probably lesbian), childkilling witch? sounds familiar...
don't know her opinions on capitalism though ;)
Many legends (or dare I say most) portray her as also one who offers assistance and guidance (providing you have the presence of mind never to phrase your communication in the form of a question ;)), and I received her name in a fog one day, and I think she is my patroness in magick as well. Enjoyed the OP.
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