Goddess Oracle Deck

Aida-Wedo
Al-Uzza
Amaterasu
Anat
Aphrodite
Ariadne
Arianrhod
Artemis
Athene
Benzaiten
The Black Virgin
Blodeuwedd
Bride
The Cailleach
Ceres
Cerridwen
Ch'ang O
Chalchiuhtlicue
Coyolxauhqui
Danu
Diana
Erzulie
Faerie
Fatima

Freyja
Gaea
Ganga
Green Tara
Gwenhwyfer
Hathor
Hekate

Hel
Hera
Ho Hsien-Ku
Idun
Inanna
Ishtar
Isis
Jeanne D'Arc
Kali
Kamrusepas
Kelaeno
Kirke
Kore
Kwan Yin
Laverna
Lilith
Macha
The Magdalene
Maman Brijit
Medusa
Melaina

Momoy
Morgana
Nekhbet
Nu Kua
Nut
Nyx
Oshun
Oya
Pele
Pomona
Rhiannon
Sedna
Sekhmet
Selene
Sengen
Sheila-na-gig
Sibyl

Sif
Skuld
Sophia
Sri Lakshmi
Sunna
Tlazolteotl
Uma
Vesta
The Virgin Mary
Vivian
White Tara
Yemaya

 

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I have heard it said that I live at the bottom of a lake. This is a foolish tale for a foolish time—how should I boil my brews with no fire? Just as well, let none come looking.

Children I had, a boy and a girl, and though twins in the womb together, they could not have been more unalike. The girl, slender as a lily-stem, grew to musical fairness. The boy, though, time did not tame, and daily he grew grimmer and uglier, his voice the creak of a crow.

Now my daughter I did not worry for; her looks made her well-loved. But in this world where beauty is prized, what place will ugliness find? Yet, if one has wisdom, much may be overlooked.

For a year and a day I would tend that brew, cutting the correct herbs at the times told by the constellations. Roots and seeds I ground at the growing moon, clear water I drew in the deep night. I collected and cut and chanted, and stirred and sang and fell silent at the proper times, while the servant boy fed the fire and saw to the simmering. No, it was no small task. But what mother will see her son rejected by the world and not make it right?

Still, I misjudged.

The year was waning as in the garden I gathered the last of the herbs. Then I heard a great crash and a cry, and I knew myself betrayed. The potion had come to its completion, and the three precious drops saved for my son had fallen instead on the serving-boy. Black fury filled me and I set off screaming for the house, murder in my mind. But the boy knows me now, and knows himself, and he is already running, a hare leaping through the thicket. In my anger I become a hound grey as a ghost, and swift as the winter wind I give chase. I follow him through every trick and turn the hunted have, and soon my teeth shall meet in his hide. Of a sudden he springs into a stream, and within its waters changes to a salmon fast as fear. I in my turn am a she-otter, sleek and swift and greedy. My whiskers touch his tail, and he bursts from the water to the sunlight as a sparrow, darting like fire. I follow him then as a hawk, tearing talons reaching, reaching—into a barn he flees, and falling to the harvest-floor he is a wheat-seed, settling among a thousand thousand other grains. Fool! Does he think he is saved? All time is now mine, though I will not need it. Becoming a black hen, I soon find him and swallow him down.

A month or two on, I feel a familiar stirring in my womb. In rage I realize it is not over, and the boy now grows within me. But I will be rid of him. I could kill the babe now, for my anger is still hot. But no, I will wait until the child is born. I would have it know betrayal.

When the brat was born from me, I found myself barren. My murderous will had been emptied out with the blood and the birth. That evening I bound the child in a coracle and let the Sea take him. Whether he die or live, it is no matter to me.

 

 


Goddess Tales

Aida-Wedo
Amaterasu
Aphrodite
Ariadne
Arianrhod
Athene
Blodeuwedd
Bride
Cerridwen
Ch'ang O
Coyolxauhqui
Freyja
Ishtar
Kali
Kirke
Kore
Laverna
Lilith
The Magdalene
Medusa
Pomona
Rhiannon

 

All art here ©2004 Thalia Took, aka The Artist Formerly Known As Mary Crane.
You are free to borrow the images here for your own personal or religious use. If you use any on your
personal non-commercial website, please credit the work to Thalia Took.
If you can link back to this site, I'd appreciate it. Always ask permission first for any other requests for use of this art.
Obscure Goddess Online Directory text ©2006 Thalia Took, and please do not reproduce it.
Questions or comments? E-mail me.