Tag: Witchcraft Poetry

  • Author’s Note

    Every rebellion begins as a prayer whispered into darkness.

    Mary Cast a Little Hex is the solitary hymn — a woman standing before her altar of ruin, choosing power over apology. She is the patron saint of the unrepentant, the quiet spark that lights the rebellion.

    Ring Around the Rose Bush is her echo, multiplied — the chorus of daughters who rose from her ashes, the feral bloom of a world reborn through wrath and grace. It is a hymn for every heretic heart that refuses to kneel.

    Together, these poems are a Witch’s Gospel: a scripture of survival and sanctified rage.

    To burn and still bloom — that is the miracle.
    To be called “too much” and still rise — that is the magic.

    May every word be a spell,
    and every reader, a flame.

    Rowan Evans


    A gothic garden at midnight with black roses and candles, a lone female figure standing near a stone altar, mist and embers swirling around.
    From ashes bloom dark petals — the witch’s gospel in motion.

    Mary Cast a Little Hex
    Poetry by Rowan Evans
    (Written June 28th, 2025)

    Mary cast a little hex,
    The altar cold as stone—
    A whisper stitched from thorn and wax,
    A prayer she made alone.

    She didn’t weep. She didn’t kneel.
    She bit the moon instead—
    And carved her name in shadows deep,
    Where angels fear to tread.

    They called her “witch” with tongues of ash,
    Their blessings laced with blame.
    But Mary burned like prophecy—
    Too holy for their shame.

    Her heart was made of comet dust,
    Her breath a velvet flame.
    She kissed the wind and it obeyed,
    Then vanished with no name.

    And now the stars recall her sigh,
    The dark hums with her spell.
    Each midnight bloom, each broken clock
    Still rings the chapel bell.

    She walks in dreams of restless girls
    Who ache, but do not bend—
    Their lashes lit with embers red,
    Their laughter sharp at end.

    Now every hex, each whispered spell,
    Still bears her rebel mark—
    A kiss of ink, a flame of hope,
    A torch lit in the dark.


    Ring Around the Rose Bush
    Poetry by Rowan Evans
    (Written June 29th, 2025)

    Ring around the rose bush,
    A pocket full of thorns—
    Ashes to ashes,
    Patriarchy drags us into scorn.

    Whispers crawl beneath cracked lips,
    Where shadows breed and plots conspire,
    They wear their crowns of rotten bone,
    And feed us poison from the pyre.

    We dance in ruins, blackened bells,
    Singing songs they tried to smother,
    Our bones break glass beneath their heels,
    Our fury is a mother.

    Ring around the rose bush,
    We spin through smoke and flame—
    Ashes choke the blackening sky,
    But from these ashes, we carve our name.

    They bury us beneath cold earth,
    Try to silence every scream,
    But roots of rage twist deep and dark,
    Bursting forth like a fevered dream.

    We are the thorn inside the rose,
    The wound that will not heal,
    A reckoning dressed in midnight,
    The truth they cannot steal.

    Ring around the rose bush,
    A pocket full of spite—
    Ashes to ashes,
    We rise again to fight.

    So let the gardens rot and fall,
    Let the halls grow cold and bare,
    From the cracks, new roses bloom—
    Dark petals soaked in dare.


    Step deeper into the shadows and discover the full breadth of my poetry in The Library of Ashes — an archive of ink-stained devotion, dark petals, and threshold poems that linger long after the last candle flickers. Visit The Library of Ashes →

  • Author’s Note ⛧

    Blood Oath Between Witches is a hymn of fire and shadow. It does not plead for possession—it demands presence. These words are a covenant, a celebration of the heat, the danger, and the sacred lust that exists only between equals. Let the rhythm burn in your veins; let it linger on your tongue.


    Two witches facing each other across a dark, mystical altar under a full moon, surrounded by black candles, swirling smoke, and glowing symbols and arcane sigils.
    Bound in blood, fire, and spell—two witches cast their eternal oath beneath the full moon.

    ⛧ Invocation ⛧

    I summon the velvet night and the pulse of forbidden things,
    the hunger that does not ask permission,
    the touch that knows the body before the mind.
    Step closer, let ink and blood weave a spell,
    where lips and fire speak in tongues of unrestrained devotion.


    ⛧ Blood Oath Between Witches ⛧
    Poetry by Rowan Evans

    I do not promise you softness.
    I promise truth—
    the kind that scorches,
    the kind that sinks into your bones
    and lives there like a name you never gave.

    I do not come in white.
    I wear the black of midnight altars,
    the crimson of bitten lips,
    the gold dust left behind
    when gods give in to pleasure.

    I do not ask for forever.
    I offer eternity—
    not the same thing.
    Forever is a lie men tell.
    Eternity is a spell we cast
    with blood and want
    and too much knowing.

    You are not my prisoner.
    You are my equal flame.
    My matchstick mouth.
    My mirror made of ruin and reverence.
    I want to burn the world with you,
    not for you.

    Touch me only if you mean it.
    Kiss me like it’s the end of everything.
    Bleed with me beneath the full moon
    and say my name like it’s a weapon
    you never want sheathed again.

    Because I’ll bind to you,
    not with rope, but with rite.
    Not with rings, but with ruin.
    Not with “mine,”
    but with “we.”

    No god made this.
    No angel blessed it.
    Only us—
    two witches, two wounds,
    two wildfire prayers
    spoken in the tongue of temptation.

    So I say this now:
    If you leave, I won’t chase.
    But your shadow will always follow me—
    and you’ll hear my vow
    in every mirror
    that dares to show you your true self.

    We were carved in the same dark.
    And I would choose you,
    again and again,
    even knowing you’d hex me
    with your absence.

    This is my oath.
    Spoken in lust.
    Sealed in longing.
    Bound in blood.

    So mote it be.


    ⛧ Benediction ⛧

    May the flame that consumes never destroy,
    but bind you in the delicious ache of wanting.
    May shadows cradle your secrets,
    and may your pleasure be a covenant of truth,
    wild, unyielding, eternal.
    So mote it be.


    ⛧ Journey into the Hexverse ⛧

    Spellbound | Rowan Evans
    A dark, intoxicating poem of desire and devotion—Spellbound is an invocation of fire, blood, and forbidden magic. Rowan Evans crafts a ritualistic experience of passion, soul, and unbroken vows.

    Lust – 7 Deadly Sonnets | Rowan Evans
    My pulse quickens at each whispered breath, desires draping the air like silken chains. ‘Lust,’ the first of the 7 Deadly Sonnets, explores the fevered, consuming hunger that blurs the lines between passion and peril.

    What I Want | Rowan Evans
    A confession of desire, chaos, and devotion—What I Want explores the intoxicating pull of someone who ignites, challenges, and claims with fire and tenderness.

    Slim & Shady: After Dark | Rowan Evans
    A daring fusion of Gothic shadows and lyrical mischief, “Slim & Shady: After Dark” explores desire, obsession, and devotion through wordplay, rhythm, and fire. Explicit, audacious, and unapologetically poetic—Rowan Evans takes language to bed and sets it ablaze.

    Slim & Shady IV: Velvet & Venom | Rowan Evans
    Velvet & Venom explores desire in shadows—an ode to dominance, possession, and the sacred tension of erotic devotion. Rowan Evans blends rhythm, wordplay, and Gothic darkness into a hymn of pleasure and surrender.