The Decipherment of Nature, by Philip Kane (digital)

$9.99

(This is for the digital edition. For the print editions, see this link)

From multiple author and poet Philip Kane comes an astounding collection of poems that “turn the reader into … a badger digging for the roots of stars.” Playfully weaving together the ancient and the mundane, the poems in The Decipherment of Nature are an absolute delight for both the magically and poetically inclined.

This was not meant when I cast the spell
of rewilding, but here it is: the wolf
that licks at my face to wake me,
bats among the rafters, shy deer
that hide under the dinner table.
I follow the hollow way to my study,
where I scratch runes into birch bark.


(This is for the digital edition. For the print editions, see this link)

From multiple author and poet Philip Kane comes an astounding collection of poems that “turn the reader into … a badger digging for the roots of stars.” Playfully weaving together the ancient and the mundane, the poems in The Decipherment of Nature are an absolute delight for both the magically and poetically inclined.

This was not meant when I cast the spell
of rewilding, but here it is: the wolf
that licks at my face to wake me,
bats among the rafters, shy deer
that hide under the dinner table.
I follow the hollow way to my study,
where I scratch runes into birch bark.


Philip Kane

Philip Kane is an author and poet, a storyteller in the oral tradition, and an artist. He was a founding member of the London Surrealist Group. His previous books include The Wildwood King (Capall Bann, 1997), Unauthorised Person (Cultured Llama, 2012), and Dramatis Personae (Whisky & Beards, 2019). Philip's work has also been widely published in journals including A Beautiful Resistance; and in anthologies including the seminal Transformation: the poetry of spiritual consciousness (Rivelin Grapheme, 1988). He was a contributor to The Gorgon's Guide to Magical Resistance (Revelore Press, 2022).

Philip lives in Kent, in the south-eastern corner of England, with a large and diverse collection of books, swords and toy soldiers. He sometimes remembers to blog at his sites thenl.wordpress.com and thewayfaringtree.wordpress.com