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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Timothy Steele
Timothy Steele
Poetic form has never been an end in itself for Steele, but rather a means for engaging and exploring a wide range of subjects. "Aside from the esthetic pleasure his work affords, there is a controlled but powerful current of feeling in almost everything he writes,"...
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FURTHER READING
Poems About Christmas
A Christmas Carol
by Christina Rossetti
A Christmas Carol
by George Wither
A Visit from Saint Nicholas
by Clement Clark Moore
Christmas Bells
by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Christmas Trees
by Robert Frost
On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity
by John Milton
The Mahogany Tree
by William Makepeace Thackeray
The Oxen
by Thomas Hardy
The Savior must have been a docile Gentleman (1487)
by Emily Dickinson
The Shivering Beggar
by Robert Graves
Poems About Winter
A Winter Without Snow
by J. D. McClatchy
Blow, blow, thou winter wind
by William Shakespeare
Fishing in Winter
by Ralph Burns
From "Snow-Bound," 11:1-40, 116-154
by John Greenleaf Whittier
Heavy Snowfall in A Year Gone Past
by Laura Jensen
How like a winter hath my absence been (Sonnet 97)
by William Shakespeare
Now Winter Nights Enlarge
by Thomas Campion
Spellbound
by Emily Brontë
The Darkling Thrush
by Thomas Hardy
The Snow Man
by Wallace Stevens
The Snow Storm
by Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Visionary
by Emily Brontë
Why is the Color of Snow?
by Brenda Shaughnessy
Winter-Time
by Robert Louis Stevenson
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Toward the Winter Solstice  
by Timothy Steele

Although the roof is just a story high,

It dizzies me a little to look down.
I lariat-twirl the cord of Christmas lights
And cast it to the weeping birch’s crown;
A dowel into which I’ve screwed a hook
Enables me to reach, lift, drape, and twine
The cord among the boughs so that the bulbs
Will accent the tree’s elegant design.

Friends, passing home from work or shopping, pause
And call up commendations or critiques.
I make adjustments. Though a potpourri
Of Muslims, Christians, Buddhists, Jews, and Sikhs,
We all are conscious of the time of year;
We all enjoy its colorful displays
And keep some festival that mitigates
The dwindling warmth and compass of the days.

Some say that L.A. doesn’t suit the Yule,
But UPS vans now like magi make
Their present-laden rounds, while fallen leaves
Are gaily resurrected in their wake;
The desert lifts a full moon from the east
And issues a dry Santa Ana breeze,
And valets at chic restaurants will soon
Be tending flocks of cars and SUVs.

And as the neighborhoods sink into dusk
The fan palms scattered all across town stand
More calmly prominent, and this place seems
A vast oasis in the Holy Land.
This house might be a caravansary,
The tree a kind of cordial fountainhead
Of welcome, looped and decked with necklaces
And ceintures of green, yellow, blue, and red.

Some wonder if the star of Bethlehem
Occurred when Jupiter and Saturn crossed;
It’s comforting to look up from this roof
And feel that, while all changes, nothing’s lost,
To recollect that in antiquity
The winter solstice fell in Capricorn
And that, in the Orion Nebula,
From swirling gas, new stars are being born.




"Toward the Winter Solstice" from Toward the Winter Solstice (Swallow Press/Ohio University Press, 2006, www.ohioswallow.com).
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