Wolf Mother

She loosed a death rattle
raking up from mask ribs 
a wide echo circle 
cavernous as a vowel

Nil by ear, gore-gorged 
she glutted air, swallowed
inside a repetitive chamber 
of nothingness and blood

Blind, smiling her lipstick
she reveled in unpeeling
metal from cloying skin
layered as a noisy treat

No songs sang for Angrboda
her full throated strength
unanswered as a child 
asking about death 
the mother of all calamity
all lyrics falling flat
as those sent to conquer 

Z. D. Dicks

3 Questions for Z. D. Dicks

What was your process for creating these poems?

I looked to the Norse myths themselves and tried to capture a small part of each one and flesh out some detail. I wanted to explore what it would actually be like to exist in that space.

What is the significance of the form/genre you chose for this work?

I used a free form for the poems as it represents a more contemporary feel to a very traditional subject. Norse mythology boasts some of the oldest poetry and I felt compelled to put my own slant on it.

What is the significance of this work to you?

These three poems represent the birth of Norse mythology, a navigation of the world tree and the often overlooked wife of Loki. The significance is to touch on the pain of creation, initially with the world and then between inhabitants of a shared space and then full circle touching on the mother of monsters. The point, if there is one, is that suffering is constant and it isn’t how to avoid it but rather accept it. There is a lot of esoteric knowledge touched on in Norse mythology and I tried to share a small part of it.

Z. D. Dicks holds an MA in Creative and Critical Writing from the University of Gloucestershire. 

In 2016 he founded the Gloucestershire Poetry Society and the Gloucester Poetry Festival. His poetry is widely published.

He currently has three collections 'Malcontent' and 'Intimate Nature' with Black Eyes publishing (2019) and one 'Vexed' with Hedgehog Poetry Press (2020). 

Helen Ivory (Ink, Sweat and Tears) described his work as 'muscular language' and is himself 'a gothic Seamus Heaney' according to Anna Saunders.

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