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ArtistHighly Textured artistic Salt-infused Watercolor oil pastel, 16 century tiny male playing a tiny flute, dressed in a highly embroidered jacket, vest, pants, leather buckle boots, trees covered with ripe cherries that are glistening with dewdrops, soft moonlight, mist, cobbled street, cobble stone wall, village, 1600s, Arthur rackham, Luigi Bechi, Rembrandt, James Holland
Poem by
Robert Graves
Cherries of the night are riper
Than the cherries pluckt at noon
Gather to your fairy piper
When he pipes his magic tune:
Merry, merry,
Take a cherry;
Mine are sounder,
Mine are rounder,
Mine are sweeter
For the eater
Under the moon.
And you’ll be fairies soon.
In the cherry pluckt at night,
With the dew of summer swelling,
There’s a juice of pure delight,
Cool, dark, sweet, divinely smelling.
Merry, merry,
Take a cherry;
Mine are sounder,
Mine are rounder,
Mine are sweeter
For the eater
In the moonlight.
And you’ll be fairies quite.
When I sound the fairy call,
Gather here in silent meeting,
Chin to knee on the orchard wall,
Cooled with dew and cherries eating.
Merry, merry,
Take a cherry;
Mine are sounder,
Mine are rounder,
Mine are sweeter.
For the eater
When the dews fall.
And you’ll be fairies all.
FAERIES AND MUSHROOMS
WHAT’S THE CONNECTION?
WELL, WHEN THE POEM MENTIONS…
…cherries of the night are riper…
THIS REMINDS ME…
OF …
Eating
WHICH
reminds me
that
fungi
are the
cellular
foundation
of our
food webs
as it
creates
the
rich soils
so
necessary
for
life!
Furthermore on the
subject of food,
the
Ancient
egyptian
pharaohs
so
favoured
the
distinct flavor
of
mushrooms
that they
decreed
only royalty
could partake
of and handle
these
delicacies,
these,
plants of immortality.
Meanwhile, just so you know, all of the fairy poems
shared were gathered (some written by me) a few years prior
to discovering Paul Stamets and his mushroom work. At the time
I was trying to connect, especially children, to nature with
a bit of fun by incorporating fairies, along with nature activities.
Then, when I discovered Paul Stamets and his work with mushrooms,
I thought in a way, I had discovered a holy grail to many of our environmental
problems, which has always been a core interest of mine.
This influence from Paul Stamets began around 2010 to the present.
However, because of one interview which I thought was not
in his usual style of being straight upfront, in fact, appeared to be
over-acting, I began to question the ground upon which he stood.
The following link I think gives a fair assessment and balance to all
in his regard, so perhaps, in the end, we may not throw out the baby
with the bathwater.
https://seismicspore.com/paul-stamets-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly/