From Witchcraft to Waveforms: A Century (and More) of Wonder and Dread
Witches and Witch-hunts: The North Berwick trials, folklore, feminine knowledge punished.
1925-2025: Quantum Beginnings:
Heisenberg, Schrödinger, Born, how mystery was redefined
Prophecy & Probability:
Ancient oracles vs. quantum indeterminacy.
Observation and Power:
From the king's gaze to the observer effect.
Literary Echoes:
Shakespeare’s witches vs. the poetic possibilities of quantum time.
who is being watched, who dares to step forward, and who disappears when systems turn shadows into leverage.
Bureaucratic horror
Moral ambiguity
Disinformation and political theatre
A child's name that vanishes from a form
A sponsor who must choose between silence and rescue
A protagonist who discovers the real law was never the one on paper...
Mental Torment
In the courtrooms of the mind:
Where does Horror live today?
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The villagers always said that Tie One On had the name of a man fated for trouble. He was the linesman who never came down from his pole sober, or so Maudie O’Byrne would mutter when the wires crackled mid-rosary.
When he announced he was joining the AA, the whole parish perked up their ears.
“Which AA?" asked Sam Murh Aye, his gaffer.
“The one with the cars?" suggested Apple Beth.
“No, the one with the stars!" said Orla, who claimed she’d seen him stringing fairy lights between Orion’s Belt and the roof of The Echo Shelf.
In truth, Tie One On wasn’t sure himself. He signed his name under a poster pinned crooked on the pub wall. By the time he realised it was for the Amateur Astronomers, he’d already promised Maudie he was turning over a new leaf, and Sam he was volunteering for roadside rescues, and the Snake Sisters that he’d sworn off whiskey.
So now, every Thursday, the man has to juggle all three. One week he’s fixing a broken axle in the ditch, the next he’s peering through a telescope at Saturn, and always, always insisting he hasn’t touched a drop.
Yet, as the village tells it, the wires have never hummed sweeter, the night sky has never glimmered brighter, and the pints at the Whim Whar have never been poured faster.
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An Under Lough Owel Trial!
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DeLacy's story resonates because it captures the essence of life's fragility and the significance of how we choose to remember and honor those we've lost. It's a testament to the healing power of storytelling, the comfort found in shared memories, and the enduring strength of familial bonds through the lens of love, loss, and the quirky, unforgettable moments that define our relationships. |
This compilation presents a striking contrast between traditional sayings, reflecting a blend of wisdom, cautionary advice, and folk wisdom, and the philosophical insights of John Dewey, a prominent figure in the philosophy of education and pragmatism. The traditional sayings encapsulate lessons learned through generations, often serving as guidelines for personal conduct, moral behavior, and the understanding of lifeFs unpredictabilities and challenges. |
Editor's Note: The updates from The Linnet's Wings touch on the bittersweet nature of transitions within any endeavor that involves passion and collective effort. The departures of Nonnie Augustine and Diana Ferraro mark the end of chapters but also underscore the impact of their contributions. |
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![]() Book Two: Indigo |
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2025, Spring/Summer Archive in Process Here
Click on the image to read on ...
Prologue
When the Muse Built the Castle
Echoes from the Altar: A Litany for the Makers
The Platform's Voice
Autumn Archive Build
Happening NOW
Feudalism & the Artist -- A 21st-Century Meditation
Posted weekly on The Linnet’s Wings
What happens when the artist becomes the brand, and the platform becomes the lord?
In this four-part reflection, we trace a path from medieval altars to digital castles, from illuminated manuscripts to streaming metrics. Along the way, we’ll meet Picasso, Bono, Stephen King--and the whispering force behind every scroll: the algorithm.
This is a meditation on art, power, and what it means to create in a world that measures everything.
Join us each week for a new page from this unfolding tapestry.
“We were not made to be content. We were made to create."
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A boy in Dhaka witnesses a labourer’s final moments during communal unrest. Inspired by Amartya Sen’s account of Kader Mia, this story reflects on justice, dignity, and the cost of poverty
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Chapter 9 Addendum: Food Entitlement and Human Agency (Development as Freedom)
Sen reminds us that food is not just a commodity--it is a right, linked to human agency. The question is not merely how much food exists, but who controls access, who has the power to earn, to farm, to feed. Economic unfreedom--like that faced by Kader Mia--leads to social suffering.
“The solution of the population problem calls for more freedom, not less."
If we are duty-bound to future generations, the promise must be dignity, not just survival. Hunger is not inevitable--it is a political and economic failure. And freedom, as Sen would say, is both the means and the end of our answer.
"Heavy Sighs (an imitation of Juvenal)" is a vivid, satirical poem that captures the essence of modern societal grievances and idiosyncrasies, echoing the style of the Roman poet Juvenal. Its sharp commentary on technology, societal norms, and human nature is both humorous and critical, embodying the spirit of classical satire in a contemporary context.
Overall, this collection of poems skillfully blends humor, satire, and philosophical musings, offering a sharp commentary on contemporary society while drawing inspiration from classical literary traditions.
Heavy Sighs by Martin Heavisides
August is underway and leavig its footprints in the grass at Purrport. We are tracing the church steps in the late light, watching the Pier Keeper polish his welcome, following Orla’s whispers through the gardens, and finding our way to the Weaver’s Cottage, where the Solstice butterfly still hovers in memory of the dream. The pages hold more than stories now, they hold the month’s weather (July's,) the turn of the flowers, and the way the air changed when certain names were spoken aloud.
AUGUST MAPPING AT THE PURRPORT
"Flight 103 to Lockerbie: Happy Anniversary" by Russell Bittner poignantly contrasts the serene domesticity of a winter storm with the devastating tragedy of the Lockerbie bombing. The poem reflects on the comfort of home and the unspeakable loss suffered by others, evoking the grief of those who wait in vain for loved ones who will never return, underscoring the stark divide between personal peace and collective sorrow.
Flight 103 to Lockerbie Happy Anniversary
In Surface Tension, Colin Will dives from bellyflops to molecular bonds, exploring how water#s skin holds midges aloft yet breaks beneath a diver#s fall. A lyrical blend of physics and sensation, where impact, scale, and the dance of molecules meet
In Dull Day at the Beach, Julie Hogg drifts between Jerez and Cadiz, where dragonflies dance, sparrows sip the Atlantic, and a single wave arches like an eyebrow. A languid, sensual meditation on nuance, stillness, and the quiet poetry of the Costa de la Luz
Dull day at the beach by Julie Hogg
In Listening to Maria Callas, James Graham contrasts the harsh noise of daily life with the transcendent beauty of Casta Diva. Her voice silences the world’s clamor, sowing peace in a moment where music eclipses war, machines, and time itself.
Listening to Maria Callas by James Graham
In "Viewing Vermeer's 'Young Woman with a Water Pitcher,'" Neil Dyer contemplates the quiet power of the painting's subject. The poem highlights the woman’s connection to light, as she becomes a vessel channeling sunlight into the room, bringing everything to life. The poet gradually uncovers the subtle radiance of the scene, where light transforms the ordinary into something sacred and vibrant.
In People in Rooms, Gemma Meek captures a moment of quiet survival--tempting fate, watching the bridge at days end, and finding small refuge in Bukowski. A raw, unvarnished glimpse into solitude, longing, and the fragile act of getting through another day.
In False Detective, Patricia Walsh captures a life under constant watch--letters censored, calls screened, movements monitored. Through sharp, restless lines, the poem explores paranoia, control, and the uneasy dance between suspicion and self-preservation
False Detective by Patricia Walsh
The Album by Nick Bowman is a moving elegy in verse, unfolding the quiet mystery of a woman's past through keepsakes and photographs. As memories resurface from a bottom drawer, a haunting revelation at Belsen deepens the grief--and wonder--of those she left behind.
As the story unfolds, Flora and Esteban reflect on the thin lines between fiction and reality, recognizing their power to influence the course of both. In this world of energy and storytelling, ancient tales and modern realities intertwine, revealing the profound impact of imagination and memory on the flow of time.
More Coming Soon in
The Magpie Report
Transport and Communications In Colomlado in Under Lough Owel