The Lyre of Truth By Mitchell Pluto

Originally published as Carnival House in Cadaver Dogs 2024 and Espiral en el Estuco (Spanish Edition) 2025 Adapted for public reading.

All Rights Reserved by ©Mitchell Pluto

The lesser mysteries were open to anyone who wanted to join the lively street parade, but unraveling the secrets of the greater enigmas involved being selected.

The secret group of performers included actresses who helped change people’s perceptions of themselves.

A spine and a brain were simply a keyboard to play.

Few know the mysterious past of the mystery troupe. Some say they are witches, while others claim they are ingenious philosophers.

Many suggest that their extraordinary four-dimensional theatrical experience has the potential to induce a psychic state in the audience.
No one can answer with certainty.

The authors of the show will remain unknown to us. The key is self-exploration to better understand the thing we call ourselves.

I was inspired by witnessing their performances, especially considering the restrictions that prevented women from participating in Hellas theater. I wanted to see how the mystery play portrayed metempsychosis.

A dignified woman handed me an invitation.

I considered myself lucky.

The statements of the friends who attended concurred: all who ventured into the underground temple emerged transformed and with an enhanced mind.

My goal was enjoyment, whether the secrets were imaginary, sexual, or drug-induced.

Following the temple’s instructions, I performed the ablutions in the river. The first performer was a fisherman, who told me he was looking for pitch, rhythm, and duration. He cast a line, and I caught it.

He led me to the bank, and I followed him to the temple.

Crows in flight watched us as we walked. They have been trained to memorize and vocalize my name. The birds amuse themselves by taunting me with predictions related to my failure.

At the entrance, ancient emblems were visible. The door panel resembled the shape of the sarcophagus of Usiris, god of the chthonic realm.

The symbols painted on the door also matched those of the Shiva lingam, the serpent of Asclepius, and a symbol resembling a symmetrical pine cone.

To begin, I knocked on the door three times. Aegle, a very cheerful hostess, greeted me by name. A pleasant feeling of well-being washed over me.

She was generous and held a cup.

The dim candlelight cast strange shadows on the walls of a dark room.

Someone had placed a coffin in the floor.

This coffin supported a staircase that led down into the earth.

With each step down, the rungs became wetter, their textures mysterious.
I decided to ignore what I felt and focus on something else.

Taking the last step, I found myself inside a pentagram drawn on the ground. A woman was present at each point, one of whom was my host. They introduced themselves.

Their names were Hygieia of Purification, Panacea of ​​Medicine, Iaso of Revitalization, Aceso of Operation, and the hostess, Aegle of Joyful Strength.

There I received the first cup, called kykeon. Its taste was reminiscent of strong beer. With their voices united, the women expressed their thoughts through chants.

Flutes could be heard in the background.

The music intertwined, creating a mixture of harmony and discord that reflected my physical fluctuations.

At different corners of the star, the women rotated and alternated their positions.

I joined in this movement by observing; I felt a deep satisfaction and confidence.

With a sudden pause, the music ended, leaving behind an eerie silence. I was handed a torch. Aegle and her sisters lead me down a dark corridor, their arms poking through holes in the wall, ready to support me.

Panacea advises me to be careful of the light source as I make my way through a maze of several thick, damp curtains. Some of them being hanging animal furs.

We enter a chamber bathed in a soft green glow, with walls adorned with stained-glass windows that form an octagon.

In the center of the room, a golden chair has been placed in front of a small well.

I feel the women’s hands as they take my torch and guide me toward the well.

They buried me up to my neck; their soothing voices offered me some comfort, but not much. In a melodious voice, Iaso spoke my name, and the sound hung in the air.

Silence filled the space as a woman, dressed in a sheer black peplos, entered the room.

She embodied the sensuality of Demeter with her full figure. A shiver ran through her body as she sat on the golden chair. I stood before her, unable to move.

Aceso poured me another kykeon and gently held it to my lips. Then, Hygiea poured water on my hair.

The sisters took turns drawing rings around my head on the ground.
They created a line extending from my chin to the circumference of the circle. Hygiea sang a song, showing me how music serves as a compass in life.

As the song ended, Demeter rose from her chair and her eyes met mine.

Demeter stood on the outer edge, where the diameter and circumference met.

On her knees, she revealed her vulva by opening her skirt.

Demeter’s voice gave me a strange atmosphere.

The woman used an onomatopoeic effect, employing primal sounds instead of words. I imagined myself transported to a time before civilization.
The sounds displayed wild, sexual, and disturbing characteristics.

The five sisters dug me out and cared for me as if I were an uprooted plant.
They passed me a torch.

Iaso led the way, and the sisters followed. We entered a rotating, cylindrical tunnel operated by hydraulic power.

Maintaining my balance is a challenge.

A mirrored curtain distorts my reflection at the end of the tunnel.

Aegle advised me to face it head-on, passing through.

Behind the curtain, two steam vents dispersed. As the water vapor dissipated, a huge relief of a nude Demeter rose on a stone wall.

A raised walkway gave access to a door located where her vagina was.

The river of figures, dressed in contrasting black and white, moves in a choreographed, serpentine formation beneath the bridge.

This creates a deep unease in me.

The work depicts a battle scene, with soldiers sinking beneath the tides, their screams muffled by the earth.

This is iron and other minerals being sacrificed.

The haunting, animal wail freezes the moisture in my body. My only concern was the fear it created, overshadowing the actor’s talent and the astonishing stage effects. The fiction’s realistic portrayal convinced me of its truth.

I received Panacea’s advice to remove myself from disturbing thoughts.
Aceso takes my light and signals me to enter through the door. Hoping to find safety, I pass through colorful layers of scented sheets that release fragrances and pheromones, easing my discomfort.

I find myself in a spherical chamber. There is a portal in the ceiling that illuminates a rectangular bed with sunlight.

The sight of countless fresh flowers hid any trace of a wall, giving me time to recover and admire the intelligence of nature in each petal for many hours.

The group of five sisters entered the room dressed in black. They asked me to undress.

The intention was to remove any artificial obstacles between the goddess Persephone and me.

They prepared me, washed me, and offered me a calming drink that later became a potent aphrodisiac.

The sisters massaged my body to align the points with the star’s proportions and gave me affirmations that, to this day, have a positive effect on my thinking.

Persephone entered the room.

The woman removed her clothes.

Persephone had a youthful, simple face, with a pear-shaped body.

The five women formed a star constellation, with us at the center.

Hygieia sang a comical song that brought us both joy and laughter.

It was followed by a song that filled the air with sad melodies. It awakened a bittersweet sense of rediscovering something long forgotten.

Accompanied by Persephone, I experienced a sense of wholeness that completed the missing pieces of an unfinished picture.

Before we met, like a blazing and radiant star, Persephone comforted me.
I fell into a deep sleep with lucid dreams. I understood totality within an ever-present circle.

Revelations fueled my growth at every stage of my past life.

Everything I observed, inside and outside my thoughts, shone with brilliance.

I reached a state of peace where there are no boundaries.

By providing me with palm trees and poppy stalks, the group of five sisters acted out a brief skit where I was a man impregnated by the goddess.

This metaphorical journey disturbed me.

Panacea informed me that this ritual fostered the growth of a man’s inner woman, the anima. I must nurture my visionary mindset, inspired by the goddess Athena.

She reminds me that Athena was born in the head of Zeus. I am told she will heal my masculinity and that women will invite me into their bodies without fear.

Soon I observed the full moon within the oculus of the curved ceiling.

Strangers and street people filled the place.

Plainly dressed, Demeter and Persephone passed unnoticed in the crowd. With the room packed with spectators, I became the center of attention.

Someone announced my passing.

Despite my presence as a living being, the actors remained absorbed in their characters.

A tower of sand lay beneath the bed block that fit over a hollow.

The sand trickled out as vents opened from a lower level, sinking the bed.

Spectators showered me with flowers as I slid beneath the dark floor.

Soon, my perception was limited to that of people huddled in a suspended rectangular frame.

I kept my gaze fixed on the figure until it faded into the distance.

I analyzed the impressions the theater had left on my mind.

Love swept over me, but it vanished in an instant.

The elevator stopped, and I found myself surrounded by curtains of an intense magenta glow.

From behind the curtain, an open hand appeared, and without hesitation, I reached out and shook it.

The cavern I landed in had braziers lit with purple and red light.

Precious stones adorned the cave walls with sparkles.

A bearded man, dressed in a crocodile skin, held a horned cup and told me I was expecting too much.

The five sisters, the attendants, had transformed into untamed figures, wearing only leopard skins around their waists.

Their breasts swung and their hair was disheveled.

He handed me the drinking horn, and I drank.

I asked him if this was Hades.

He replied that it was only a mortuary cave, ruining the disturbing image I had conjured in my mind. He said it was his place, Pluto’s lair.

He instructed me to follow him through a door where cavernous formations resembled fangs.

With some effort, we arrived at a dining room fit for an emperor.

Someone had prepared the food and placed it on the table.

He ordered me to sit down and eat, which was more of an invitation.

The five sisters consumed their food with an exaggerated display of hunger.

It was comical, but they played their parts so well that it became unsettling.

I hadn’t eaten in a while, so I was hungry.

While I was eating, Pluto was playing cat’s cradle. He braided a rope and handed it to me.

He told me to tie it around my waist and meditate on its meaning.

After we finished eating, Pluto led me to a mannequin wearing armor.
Pluto instructed me to put it on.

As he molded a piece of metal on an anvil, he told me to wait for the monster clown, whom he called Shoort.

I remained worried, expecting something to happen at any moment.

But nothing happened for a long time.

As I dozed, a creature emerged from the darkness.

The sisters sang a discordant chorus without fanfare or relief.

Rising, the creature demanded attention with its intimidating presence, asserting its dominance by finding the deepest fear within me. The monster took over my most intimate space. Fear paralyzed me. I reacted and broke free.

I fought the monster and stopped it, surprising myself.

Pluto yelled, “Grab the mask!”

I removed the mask, revealing the actor who was the fisherman.

Comically, the fisherman confessed to giving in, explaining that his actions were part of an elaborate plan to deceive me.

He said he had no choice but to follow orders.

I was about to delve deeper into my interrogation when a child’s crying diverted my attention.

Within seconds, I stumbled upon a boy trapped in a tunnel, out of my reach.

I untied the belt and rescued the little boy from the hole.

He hugged me, expressing his gratitude. The boy identified himself by my exact name.

Pluto and the five sisters clapped and cheered.

The women congratulated me as Aceso offered me a soft drink laced with anesthesia.

I woke up. The five sisters, disguised as bearded men, stared at me. They mocked the male voice as they spoke.

The voices were authoritarian, harsh, and angry.

Their question: Why did a woman like me lose consciousness?

I admitted to them that I didn’t understand what they meant.

The performers held me captive in their irony while remaining in character.

The ‘men’ helped me up, patting me on the buttocks and chest as I stood.

I realized and saw that we were performing on a stage with an audience present.

Through a mirror on the wall, I realized that someone had dressed me as a woman without my consent.

I protested, but discovered my role was silent.

The actresses did an extraordinary job pretending not to hear me.

Although the audience could hear my voice, they made unpleasant comments.

It didn’t take me long to understand the plot of the play.

The setting was a brothel. As an enslaved woman, I was traded for work in a prostitution establishment.

Three sisters took on the roles of slave traders.

Their authoritarian and malicious voices terrified me.

The remaining sisters portrayed the owner and the client.

The client’s expectation frightened me.

I kept overlooking the fact that it was only a simulation.

Now I saw the expectations I had hidden from the Aegle when he first greeted me.

My reflections were becoming visible in other people.

Three sisters crowded around me and, with surprising force, threw me into the crowd.

My body moved over the surface of the crowd, which tore off my dress while groping me.

As I reached the back of the audience, the five sisters intervened and embraced my exposed body.

By symbolically becoming a woman, the ritual allowed man to enhance his masculinity and develop greater empathy. Then, making love puts us in touch with a divine state.

The act of this love to women made me sense a connection to a godly presence that is universal.

My deepest longing becomes the foundation for love and creation.

I began the day by integrating tattvik tides into my exercises, and I could already feel a mature rhythm in my being.

I challenged myself blindfolded, while my eyes remained fixed on the shapes of my imagination.

Among the variety of tattvik shapes, the representation of air is a solid blue circle.

Earth is a transparent yellow square.

Fire looks like a red, triangular liquid.

Like a crescent of flaming silver, the water shimmered.

In the mind, the tattvic form resembles a dark egg.

It absorbs all light and is even darker than the surrounding darkness.

To complete this task, I visualize the symbols and relate them to other elemental designs.

It is important to replicate the images as accurately as possible and analyze the reasons for their deterioration.

By tracking and observing how the images deteriorate, I can understand other subconscious thought forms.

Later, the sisters led me to a cubicle with mirrored tile floors, walls, and ceiling.

Three chairs surrounded a triangular table at the focal point of the room.

On the table was a flat, round plate that looked like a coiled snake. I discovered that this was a game called Mehen.

I played a bit of Mehen with the twins.

It was difficult to distinguish who was causal and who was perpetual.

One twin is the other in the limited form of the eternal idea.

They seemed like four instead of a pair.

The twins embodied a perfect living square, treating all sides equally like Nzambi.

I participated in a couple of games. I fell short in the first, but won the second with the help of a lion.

These two events made me reconsider my participation in the works I was involved in.

Now the final ritual was taking place in the Telesterion, an acoustic pillared hall.

Throughout each ceremony, the dedicated team of sisters accompanied and guided me.

Like markings on a score, each sister represented a bar line, providing pitch, tempo, and duration to facilitate my experience.

The five daughters of Asclepius moved within the staff, shifting positions. Their perfect harmony generated a unicursal rhythm, instilling a sense of unconditional well-being.

At that moment, I stood before the god of the sun, the star that radiates growth, maturity, and harmony.

Apollo has a dark complexion.

He wears a reflective suit that reverberates with the surrounding surfaces. In his wife’s hands, a harp resonated with soothing melodies as he played the saxophone.

Many birds fluttered around him as he played.

The final stage of the ritual involves offering a song to the radiant sun, which fills the atmosphere with harmonious melodies.

The star embodies the force that drives people in their pursuit of well-being, intelligence, and benevolence.

Keeping music in our hearts aligns all the chords around the goddess.

This connection reminds us of our deep philosophical connection with nature and its impact on our well-being.

Warlock Tree, Rhizomatic writings by Victoria Riquelme

Capítulo I

Limbo de hoja (Percepción)

Rizoma herbolario

Rizoma comestible, tubérculo sanador, yema axilar e interrumpida, epigeo brote conquistador de jengibre, lúpulo y cúrcuma medicinal. Rizoma incontrolable, inalcanzable, rebelde rizoma de venas de tallos subterráneos e ingobernables. También eres nutriente, órgano de reserva para las plantas y sostienes con tu amor horizontal los tallos perennes. No eres inmortal ya que mueres de vejez con el curso de los años; pero en verdad no mueres nunca, nuevos tallos inquietos brotan y siguen y se quiebran y siguen y los cortan y se doblen y siguen creciendo. Se aferran al suelo, ramificándose y creando esa red entrelazada de conexiones que los mantiene vivos y unidos. Rizoma difícil, no eres estático ni sistemático Tienes tantos puntos de vista y miras por todos los ojos la creación de la tierra.

La nieta del brujo

El pájaro austral canta debajo de la lluvia balanceándose en el árbol rezado y superviviente. Pica los limones y entona. Caen las semillas en la poza de agua que lava sus raíces; dedos rizomas: brotan flores cítricas que nadan. Llueve en el jardín del curandero. Don Manuel Antonio Lezana es sereno; sabe leer el idioma antiguo. El de la piedra. El tallado…

Oficio antiguo

Somos los cultivadores brujos, los de la marca en el cuerpo, nuestro oficio es la botánica de la sobrevivencia. Somos los gentiles, observamos la belleza en el micelio del auxilio. Vivimos muchas vidas: eres bienvenido a regar nuestras tierras.

Árbol brujo

Dormí en tu halo tardes de primavera, hice el amor con el destello del sol que penetraba tus hojas calientes. Subrayé mi nombre en la secreta elevación de tu mejilla. Es verdad tu belleza, es verdad al caer el agua en tu humedad y tu sudor de invierno. Comí cada hongo alucinógeno proveniente de tu mutación, me cobijé del sol neurálgico cuando mi piel ardía, descansé mis huesos sudorosos en tu sombra, canté el nacimiento de pájaros en nidos de pelo lobo. Aprendí el nuevo idioma de lo recóndito, de las profundidades, de lo mas sublime de las estrellas…

Recorrer los textos de Árbol brujo es aceptar el curso de un río; flotar sobre aguas que cambian de velocidad sin advertencia. Adentrarse en sus palabras significa estar dispuesto a habitar el micelio de la autora, recorrer sus hebras y vivir en sus espacios. Buscar nuevas entradas y salidas, pues como dice Victoria Riquelme: «nunca ha de cerrarse ningún camino». Un rizoma de lenguaje feroz y sensual será lo que encontrarán en estas páginas.

Leonel Huerta / Chile/ 2024

Oracle Painting by Sarah Whitmire

I believe that I died when I was a child. Or perhaps a part of me died and something different was brought back. After that, things were not the same for me. I had several more brushes with death and suffering moving forward. These experiences shaped who I would become. They taught me about the uncertainty and duality of life and also brought me to a fierce inward state of being.

Decisive Action

I grew up in a world of adults. I was told that children were to be seen and not heard. I was given long stretches of time to play on my own. I turned to art and creative pursuits as a way to escape into the worlds I preferred to create. I built elaborate doll houses and loved magical wilderness spaces. I was inspired by the world of Fae that Brain Froud so beautifully captured. I was fortunate that my mother took me to art museums where I fell in love immediately with the language of art.

Transform

I believe that art has the power to heal, inspire and awaken; it has saved my life more times than I can count. As an adult, I have been lucky to keep my curiosity and magic alive. I pride myself on growth and becoming more and more who I prefer to be. I have now trained for over a decade in mystic and spiritual disciplines with the mission to inspire the world with my connection to what I call the Muse.

Allies

When I paint, I am moved by intuitive Muse forces from moment-to-moment, making marks with a variety of implements from my hands to brushes and handmade tools. I create from an empty meditative space, not knowing what will come out. There’s a huge amount of surrendering as I have to allow things to be as they are. Ugly or beautiful… I have to release all judgement. It’s one of the hardest things I do. It feels very vulnerable for me to allow “what is” when people are watching. And that is part of my work.

Glamour

What comes next often depends on the energy in a place, or time, or the viewers themselves who I feel pull the work through me. Over a period of 6-12 hours, sharp images, texts, and shapes are revealed as profound messages. Through abstraction, the art becomes the Oracle and represents the literal and metaphorical power of transformation. My art is in a constant state of service.

I Surrender All

The method I use requires a forgiving material like acrylic paint that permits rapid revisions. I think of my work as evolving in the moment.

Weight of Heart

Some parts gets covered up and pushed back and others change and are pulled forward. The pieces tell their own narrative as they become deeper with layers and more defined. I work on large 6 foot x 4 foot pieces of birch and frequently layer with colored pencil, watercolors, oil pastels, pouring paint, acrylic ink, China marker and more.

Gallery

When the pieces are ready we work hard to meticulously scan them at high resolution and make them into Oracle cards. I have always believed that these images are for others and sharing them is important as meaning makers for others. I release new each series of cards as they become available. Currently series 1 + 2 are available and I am painting pieces that will become Series 3 + 4 now.

I have performed this oracle painting performance every week at festivals, clubs and events, and online for the past 6 years. I believe the true magic is that these pieces are not only for viewing but can also be experienced. I invite you to journey with me as I discover the messages the Divine Muse will uncover next!

written by ©Sarah Whitmire

You can find me and my social media links at whitmireart.com

Victoria Morrison, Seed Wisdom

seed wisdom

Imperfect seeds also germinate,
in a more difficult way; painful stem grows
of the tormented plant
What will this spring concoction be?
that the drug that saves it

has turned into glycine – creamy smell
bittersweet sugar, citrus undertones
in disguised purple.
Wild birds recite verses in the air
Has the song of the mother bird healed her?

Am I really here, watching
the miracle of my fertile land
or is it my mind that imitates
to the dying man who escapes from the barren land
and look for the seed to save the world?

We are the witch poets, the ones with the mark on the face
my trade is the botany of the imperfect
that mutates to the perfect, to see the beauty in the
“not graceful” is to live many lives,
give wisdom to the marrow
spinal cord of the brain
in the seed of the plant.
The noose around the neck is the plant
tied to the cross, slowly
stop breathing and die
And what is life for?
if we don’t manage to be captivated
with all the trees in the world?
the intelligence and wisdom of flowers
is assimilated to the cunning of orphaned children
nameless beautiful bastards,
no handkerchief on the lapel,
they feed on fresh drops;
Those left by loving widows
in the tomb of the dancing moon.

the dead dance
imperfect seeds also flourish,
they love dew in rain
of scarlet evenings
in the smell of smoke, fire and mapacho tobacco.

At night …
the frost settles on the petal of her lip;
nice to freeze like this, being kissed
because of the cold that rests in the water garden.
I caress each stem without prejudice to its appearance
for me, the witch plant is so beautiful
like the scent of the holy white rose.
The twisted and mutilated lemon tree
has taken refuge in the grape vine
red wine lemon

Beneath the cement has grown
blooming dandelion and sphere
healing herb for the healer and sage.
Rescuing damaged seeds is the art
of the reasonable
We are the ancient poets, the ones with the mark on the face
Here I bring roots to decorate your hair.

I resurface in my garden

The wind blows hard, breaks promises.
Catastrophic hiss, fractures everything.
My hand no longer touches your figure;
broken marble.
underwater love nest
stifled desire.
You interrupted my spring
cold storm; wet paper,
You have erased all my love poems.
What do you keep in those pockets
how much do you protect?
the wind asked me
(the burden of my corpse)
Suffering for love deforms my face
-I disappear-.
I neglect my garden, I leave it without dew,
I turn to stone
and I cry my gloomy sadness.
Decay,
I look in the rocks
the calm of my weight.

I’m sorry for you ungrateful root,
when I suffer, I become bad.
I take shelter in the dead trunk,
I am dry firewood
I have no foolish claim
to be perfect for you.
Today I have seen butterfly lilies bloom,
-They talk about rebirth-
There is no end of the world, if the birds
at night they recite poems.
I resurface in my garden, I breathe, I smile.
My flowers, my steps where I recover my voice,
my singing
My silent cat and devoted friend.
imperfect seeds,
we also bloom at dawn.
What do you keep in those pockets
how much do you protect?
the wind asked me.

written by ©Victoria Morrison

Victoria Morrison, Chile 1977, Social worker, poetry and short story writer. Current and active member of SECH (Chilean Writers Society) P.E.N Chile (Poets, essayists and novelists) Published books: A room in hell (2016) Ediciones La Horca Evicted poems (2017) Editorial Ovejas Negras Pupilas de Loco (2020) Rumbos Editores (Her writings are characterized by evoking psychological themes. A lover of nature, the author explains that in each word there is healing; if we assimilate that word to the roots of each plant, just as there are imperfect seeds, there are also humans imperfect; are not the goods called “crooked trees” those that, without water, shade, or fertile soil, continue to breathe on the earth. If the fragile plant resists the cold, the weather, the human flesh sheltered in wool and scarf I should be grateful and silent, listen in silence, the frozen and brave song of the frosty hour

www.facebook.com/marielavictoriapoeta

Pupilas De Loco

@victoria_morrison_