There's nothing more gratifying for a writer, I suppose, than to be read -- and to have a person or two in some way moved by the reading. A couple of years ago, I penned "In Dark December" which has been published here and there in print and on line, and which I've read at several events. Well -- people seem to like it and it's been spreading on the internet and by emails and now I get references to the piece from far and wide. Thanks to friend Kris Thacher for the above photo, showing the poem posted on the Poetry Pole on Candelaria Road in Albuquerque, New Mexico; a far piece from my digs in Northeast Wisconsin. Sometimes, I think, a piece of writing can be bigger than its author, and that's certainly how I feel about this poem. Grateful to have had my pen on paper -- my hook in the water -- when this one came swimming by. Grateful, too, for the friends, new and old, who have helped keep this alive. ~ RM
In Dark
December
by
Ralph Murre
Whatever
you believe,
whatever
you do not,
there
are sacred rites
you
must perform
in
dark December.
Do
this for me:
Pull
together
the
kitchen table,
the
folding table,
and
that odd half-oval
usually
covered
with
bills and broken pencils
and
red ink.
Pull
together family and friends,
cool
cats and stray dogs alike.
Turn
off everything
except
colored lights,
the
roaster,
the
toaster, the stove.
Cook. Bake.
Eat.
Yes,
even the fruitcake.
Eat,
crowded around
those
assembled tables
with
mismatched chairs.
Reach
so far
in
your sharing
that
you hold the sun
in
one hand,
the
stars in the other,
and
no one between is hungry.
Now
walk together,
talk
together,
be
together
on
these darkest nights.
Give
and forgive.
Light
candles and ring bells.
Sing
the old songs.
Tell
the old stories
one
more time,
leaving
nothing out,
leaving
no one out
in
the long night,
leaving
nothing wrong
that
you can make right.
~
first published in Peninsula Pulse
11 comments:
Wonderful poem! Held special meaning to me.
Love, love, love this one.
Shannon and I are coming up for a visit soon; will call you.
Love, Steph
Ah, this is lovely...what we all remember of Christmas in childhood.
Thanks, all.
(Steph -- will be gone for a week or so soon -- hope to see you, though.)
This is on a wall at South Nest. I read it every day I was there, last week, with gratitude to Nancy for having pinned it up and you, for writing it.
24524This is on a wall at South Nest. I read it every day I was there, last week, with gratitude to Nancy for having pinned it up and you, for writing it.
Some call this a Christmas poem. With all due respect, it is much more than that. I read it every year on Winter Solstice sunset tours at the UW-Madison Arboretum, and this year I shared it with a Jewish group on New Year's Eve. Always give copies if asked.
Thanks beyond thanks, Ralph.
Love this poem, so very very much, have posted again to my FB page.
-Sue Sume, with admiration, respect and more than a tinge of envy for the creation of such a lovely thing
Wonderful poem. I wish I had written it. Thank you!
Beautiful and well written. Someone captioned an IG post with the opening words (with proper credit BTW), which was enough to get me searching for the complete text. A new favorite for me. :)
Whoever you are...YOU are the first person I ever heard read this poem, on a Winter Solstice walk in the Arboretum. I knew I had to track it down--I can't remember how I did. I am forever grateful. It is one of the favorite poems of my lifetime.
And thank you, Ralph Murre!
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