Two versions
seen from Brazil

seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from United States
seen from Indonesia
seen from United States
seen from Syria
seen from Netherlands
seen from Dominican Republic
seen from Bangladesh
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Lithuania
seen from Australia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Spain

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from Philippines
Two versions
Two Poets
Two poets running through the redwoods
Both cut up and bruised from our travels
different stories
Rhymes
And Times
Stopping for two minutes to see
All the beauty inside the
Other
people come and go
Leaving,
Believe me was hard,
Two minutes,
directions shared,
Caring more and
Loving way more than we should
Sorry we could not stay longer.
Paths lit in
Opposite directions
An inspection of what could be
But knowing we were not mean to be
Going along our way
More bumps and bruises,
More beautiful poetry.
One flicker of the past
And a poem is made
To take the place of the
Time two poets were running in the redwoods
-LBS
i don't know if i've ever found the feeling of serendipity in your eyes, i judge the feeling i get from your lies and "why"s
astraea & alitheia, the poem dumpsite
i am gazing upon the stars that shine. my eyes align with the look in your eyes but it was just a look i fantasized
astraea & alitheia , the poem dumpsite
(River Spree, Berlin, Germany)
She Spree
- Avrina Joslin
She flows in parts not breaking but allowing slowly to collect in puddles or ponds and sometimes bays where the silver sail boats come to stay.
She’s come throttling through the wild, against stones and black rock, breaking into tinier and tinier crystals of the pure where intent is not separate from purpose or action.
She branches off from a mother whose blood she gives as she did, to orphans or children, the childless and the carrying, splitting into genealogy, spilling into reservoirs of organic womb.
She sprints in and out of action, rising and falling with bombs, walls, limbs decorating her banks with a chain of assorted events, their leftovers – smell of blood on a menstruating woman sniffed by dogs, forgotten by men.
She falls from cliffs as if her wings were lost to other winged beings who found her fit to fly along: amateur bird stepping off a cliff, falling a straight line to whirpools of undercurrent and swish.
At night she catches light on the mountainous pictures she draws on her skin and moves: a stretching game where your tattoos look like other things when you play with your skin.
She catches light and throws it away, making her darker and lighter under the sun, moon and canopies of trees who write history on her; a chronological accumulation of western wind on eastern heritage, hermitage packed neatly, under whose ribbons are conflicting currents
resting in peace. Her tadpoles, fish and dead debris drown to her floor where a few plants also grow. The dead can cap the alive, her leaves can gather dust but her water will wash it all away. She will sprint, spit, spread and resist.
She will Spree.
(Christmas - Cardiff, Wales)
The Graveyard of Christmas Trees
- Thomas Stewart
It is my job to rescue the Christmas tree. I do it every year.
Push aside black bags of summer clothes, crawl into the side- space full of dust. The box, noosed with brown sello-tape, has been stitched & dumped – returned. The Christmas joy all boxed-up.
It is time for its show. It is all dolled up, embroiled with lights, told to shine, controlled when the children scream. It is brought presents it can never open. It is left alone at night still burning.
*
I am very small sneaking down the dark corridor, going to the tree. It is not real, it will never die. It will not be tossed out, weeping and cracked. The tree will continue in this torment.
Even though I am small and young, I see the ugliness in its beauty. I take the tree away with me.
*
This is the Graveyard of Christmas Trees. This is where the dead trees rest. This is where the dead trees hang up their hats. This is where they honour their dead.
Their fleeced branches are empty of tinsel & bells – they have naked heads. We pass a dead red star by the iron gates. My Christmas tree is silent & numb.
The tree and I are barely alive, crouched with invisible weights.
The ugliness of its dead folk is more than its humiliation – it is innocent. I smell its tinsel, hear the bells, I sing a hymn to the trees’ wounds.
*
Plastic leaves shred onto white stone when we leave the graveyard. My tree goes back to its second life, its only other spot. It is slow & glum. It is mourning.
I fetch a present wrapped in yellow paper – a bauble inside. We buy a new one every year. I put it on a branch. You’re not going back in the attic, I say.
(Christmas in England)
Lux mundi
- Gwyneth Box
An awning of electric stripes is draped across the market place; guttering is garlanded and lampposts blaze with paisley scrolls. Shoppers' footsteps shatter puddled light while drizzle tinsels the air. Stars look down on stars.
(Christmas - Palestine)
Christmas in a Snow Globe
- Alice Yousef
(to Amal, my late grandmother who was my Christmas)
Put Christmas away, this year our joy is deferred, a little wooden train without a railway He, the Son will be born, yet nothing red can stay birth, beauty, baubles with glitter and lights
our joy is deferred, a little wooden train without a railway the lament in my soul curls like holy, a wreath to a season not dead there's still birth, beauty, baubles laden in glitter and candle-light compact in a snow-globe, a protected scene
the lament in my soul curls like holy, a wreath to a season not dead as I pour the wine, hear the choiring children laugh on the streets, church-bells and shoppers racing the shots to give gifts, be kind
I pour the wine, hear myself laugh and choir along make wonder appear by dim candle-light give gifts, precious of being kind I shake the snow globe away from the eyes
make wonder, devoted by candle-light for He, the Son is born in Bethlehem on a night glorified his people dimming the lights of the houses, yet still chanting Gloria, Gloria - I shake the snow-globe away from the eyes
the snow falls tender on the houses, colder on my heart the wine warms, loosens wonder the town doesn't sleep, celebrating faintly I leave the candles for harsher nights snow will fall outside the snow-globe to cover what I refuse to let shine out.