Winter Solstice – a poem by Renee Williams

Winter Solstice 

December’s hush calls to me,
as I step into the kingdom of night,
frost gently crackling beneath my feet,
the sky awash with an array of stars.

Cloudless night, the Little Dipper comforts me,
a familiar friend amid this sea of heaven.
My husband joins me, his hand encircling mine,
offering welcomed warmth.

Meteors dance above us, startling spirals,
illuminating this blanket of dusk. Clusters of light
tease us. Are they galaxies, hints of a world beyond our own,
mysteries of another realm?

From the distance, a soft click clack breaks the sacred silence.
Walking to the tree line, shining our flashlight into the field,
two bucks lock antlers, halting as our beam falls upon them.
Staring, iridescent eyes reflecting back to us,

they stop and saunter into the shadows,
our presence ignored, unneeded. I exhale.
My breath becomes mist,
a ghost in the moonlight.

Renee Williams is a retired English instructor, who has written for Guitar Digest, Alien Buddha Press and Fevers of the Mind

The Year the Tree Fell – an essay by Corinne Cordasco-Pak

The Year The Tree Fell

by Corinne Cordasco-Pak

I was in bed when the Christmas tree fell over. The crash from the other room startled me awake—a heavy thump, shattering glass—and I was on my feet and in the hallway. When I emerged into the living room, I found the tree horizontal, its colored lights twinkling merrily. Broken ornaments strewn across the carpet still sparkled as brightly in the light as they had on the tree. Taking it all in, I began to cry.

#

I have always loved Christmas, but it has always made me sad. Growing up, I cried every year on Christmas night, knowing that the celebration would soon be over. In the jubilant weeks leading up to Christmas, I could pretend that the celebration would never end. All year long, I looked forward to my family’s holiday traditions. At Christmas, there was endless excitement: cookies to bake, music to play, gifts to wrap, parties to attend. Most important of all, we celebrated the “true meaning of Christmas”: the birth of Jesus.

Growing up in an Evangelical Christian family, there was no separating Christ from Christmas. All year, our lives were arranged around the routines of religious life—church, Bible studies, prayers—but at Christmastime, the whole world was celebrating along with us. Back then, I felt grateful to have been born into a family that taught me (what I understood to be) the capital-T Truth. We made a conscious effort not to lose sight of the religious context at the core of the celebration. Our holiday routines included advent calendars—the kind with candles representing the four Sundays of Advent—and carol-singing at Church. My mother bought pins that said “Jesus is the Reason for the Season” and replied “Merry Christmas” to store clerks that wished her “Happy Holidays.” Among Santas and stockings, our family set up crèches, or nativity scenes, including a lighted one in the front yard. There were living nativities too, performed outside of the church for passing cars. My youth group would portray the Holy Family, shepherds, and wisemen. During the years we attended a church where my grandfather was the pastor, I always played the Virgin Mary, loving the chance to be at the center of the festivities.

At home, starting from the time I was seven or eight, I loved to set up the nativity. Every year, when we unpacked my family’s well-loved porcelain crèche, I found the perfect spot for it and arranged it gently, though many of the figurines were chipped from years of display. I started with baby Jesus in his manger, then added Mary and Joseph, hovering near. I arranged the wise men and shepherds and barn animals at a respectful distance, all angled towards the baby. I hummed “Silent Night” as I adjusted the figures until they were perfect. 

In a house full of tinsel and lights, the task felt quiet, meditative, and holy. I wondered if the sadness I sometimes felt was an indication that I was losing sight of the true meaning of Christmas: maybe I needed to pray more to strengthen my faith. I chased the feeling I got when I set up the nativity, hoping that focusing on something meaningful would keep the sadness at bay. 

#

In my early 20s, I began to collect my own Christmas decorations. I bought a mini tree for my small apartment and trimmed it with baby’s breath and thrifted costume jewelry. With the addition of a string of white lights, the humble little tree twinkled cozily. A few years later, when I bought my first house, I had room for a larger tree, but little money to spend on decorating it. I cut paper chains and folded origami ornaments out of Trader Joe’s bags and hung my old strings of lights. The same year, my Great Aunt June—one of my grandmother’s four older sisters and a bonus grandmother to me—was no longer able to live independently and offered me her Christmas decorations. I didn’t know exactly what her collection included, but I accepted gladly. In the first box, I found kitschy figurines—a sparkly snowman, a Precious Moments cherub— but he second box held treasure: a few dozen gorgeous mid-century ornaments. They weren’t West Elm reproductions, or generic baubles, but brightly colored space-age domes and glass clusters, authentic and well cared for. I handled them gently, examining each one as I hung them high on the tree—both to show them off, and to protect them from damage.

The third and final box contained a crèche, even more elaborate than my parents’, as well as a wooden stable. I decided that it would look perfect underneath the tree, its greenery sheltering the figurines. From then on, every year, I arranged the nativity beneath the tree.

#

On the night the tree fell, I cried as I gathered broken decorations and put anything we could salvage back on the tree. Unlike just days earlier, when my husband and I’d played holiday songs as we found the perfect spot for each ornament, this was not a festive moment. The branches, once soft, had already grown scratchier. Instead of unpacking ornaments from organized boxes, we gathered the undamaged ornaments from the floor. Every time I discovered the pieces of another broken ornament flung into the corners of the room, I cried harder. 

Though many of my Aunt June’s ornaments were destroyed, her nativity was unscathed. It was not a Christmas miracle—the religious iconography protected while the secular was destroyed—because the crèche wasn’t under the tree. It was safe in my basement, still in its box.

#

That fall, a few months earlier, I’d realized that I no longer believed in God. In my final months of belief, my identity as Christian began to feel constrictive and wrong. I felt disconnected from the people who I had thought shared my values, and baffled that we could interpret our spirituality in such disparate ways. For years, I’d held onto my faith despite situations that caused me to question it, including several years at a Christian college rife with hypocrisy and abuse, a political climate in which “Christian” had come to mean “far right Republican”, and an overdue examination of values I’d been raised on, things like purity culture and total depravity. I explored different denominations—a near conversion to Catholicism, research on Quaker meetings, and several years of considering myself a “Christian mystic.” Even when I stopped attending church regularly, I’d continued to pray, read scripture, and study theology. I was afraid to let go of the faith that had been such a huge part of my life, so I tried to find something that would allow me to hold on to it, in whatever altered form it took until, one day, I reached for my faith and found it gone. 

It hadn’t seemed so hard then, that fall, to let belief slip away. In fact, I’d felt only relief as I let go of something that was causing me pain. In fall, a season of transitions, I was in good company: the trees dropped their leaves, plants shed petals, and I let go of Christianity. I had forgotten about winter, the time of year for rooting down and embracing tradition. In the same way that I relied on many of my Christmas traditions to bring comfort during dreary days and long nights—steaming mugs of cocoa and baked goods, twinkling lights, flickering clove-scented candles—my faith had brought me comfort when I faced hurt, loneliness, or loss. 

That year, as it came time to decorate for Christmas, faith was the last thing on my mind as I cheerfully unspooled lights and hung ornaments—but when I opened the blue plastic tub of Aunt June’s decorations to find the treasured crèche, I stopped. This treasured family heirloom, an emblem of the belief at the heart of Christmas festivities, was loaded with meaning.

Until that moment, I had felt at peace with my waning faith, the sight of the nativity revealed a deep, underlying grief. It didn’t feel genuine to display a scene from a faith that I had rejected, but it was still a gift from someone I loved. I was reminded of the duet from the snowy second act of the opera La Bohème, sung by two lovers who have recently parted but decide to stay together just until springtime. In the dead of winter, they cannot bear to give each other up, though the situation is dire; in the end, their reluctance leads to the permanent parting of death. In contrast, my choice to leave the nativity scene in storage that year would become the lesser of two griefs, likely sparing them from destruction on the night that the tree fell.

#

The next morning, I considered the empty space under the tree where the nativity had always stood and wanted to fill it. I wanted the kind of resolution that happened in movies like Home Alone or The Family Stone, where all conflict and doubt magically resolves on Christmas. I wanted my own movie-perfect Christmas morning, complete with a happy family in a beautiful house with a toy train circling the base of the tree. 

 I knew that my grief wouldn’t be resolved by redecorating, but the idea of a toy train under the tree comforted me. I could look forward to assembling the track each year, and with its battery-powered engine, it would move always forward, an optimistic gesture for the years to come. I bought a secondhand train online and found, when it arrived, that it was as well-loved as my family’s crèche—some of the tracks were broken, as was the button that was supposed to play a recorded whistle—but I didn’t care. The red engine pulled four cars and a jolly caboose.

I set it up beneath the tree and smiled as it chugged in circles. My grief was still there—I couldn’t unbreak ornaments or will myself into belief—but the train gave me the feeling that I’d chased every year since I was a child. The battered little toy, enjoyed for years by some other family before it came to me, became the mascot for a new kind of Christmas. Each night, I turned the train on for a few hours, letting it circle the track under the glow of the tree. 

#

I still don’t know why the tree fell. My theory is that the weight of the tree, the lights, the decorations just became too much for our old plastic stand. Whatever the cause, I will remember that night as the night that something happened that wouldn’t have happened without my loss of faith and the falling tree, something hopeful and expansive. Crying for broken ornaments, I was able to grieve a less visible loss, and recognize that I could choose how to fill the empty spaces in my life. 

When I unpack the train this year, next year, and the year after that, I will always remember the hole it filled that first Christmas. Though the holiday may not mean to me what it once did, it isn’t meaningless; there is endless meaning yet to be discovered—new decorations and traditions to replace—or join—old favorites. Maybe there will even be a day when I set up both the train and the nativity scene. The crèche still carries memories of treasured family—my Great Aunt June passed away several years ago—and, a mother now, I have new reverence for the scene of Mary and her son in the afterglow of birth. Regardless of what I do or don’t believe, when I open the box that contains the Christmas train each year, I will be reminded that even though there may always be sadness at Christmas, there is also joy waiting to be discovered in places as unassuming as an old plastic train, circling a battered tree on broken tracks.

Corinne Cordasco-Pak (she/her) received her MFA from Randolph College, where she was the fiction editor for Revolute. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Write or Die, Oyster River Pages, Identity Theory, and Near Window and she has received support from the Bread Loaf Environmental Writers’ Conference. Corinne is a member of the Wildcat Writing Group and lives in Atlanta, Georgia with her husband, toddler, and their two rescue dogs. You can find her online @CECordasco

In Later Life, Horses – a poem by Andrea Potos

In Later Life, Horses

I wasn’t one of those elementary school girls
who dreamed they were a horse, though Misty of Chincoteague
and Black Beauty were on my shelves.
Decades would pass before I looked
into the eyes of horses in their stalls
and ringside at the State Fair; shining auburn,
grey-black and russet coats, Percherons and Belgians,
thoroughbreds and Appaloosas who name was a song,
their long manes swishing while they munched
straw and oats, their hooves that belonged to the earth.
In a stature of grace, they loomed. And I can’t say what
in me must have changed, that I could take in
the great power of their being, standing
and blessing me there, below them.

Andrea Potos is the author of seven collections of poetry, most recently HER JOY BECOMES (Fernwood Press), and MARROW OF SUMMER (Kelsay Books.)

Ruined cathedral – a poem by Helen Evans

Ruined cathedral

There’s someone living in the haunted tower:
She sneaks in at night when the gates are locked,
Wakes every morning for a pre-dawn shower
In the spray of the sea and the breakers’ power.

It’s cold at night in the haunted tower,
It’s hard to work with the windows blocked,
And some solid citizen’s reported a sighting
Of a warm small halo of candlelight.

When the powers-that-be see the tower’s lived in,
They’ll confiscate the candles, have the doorway bricked in.
But the Spirit in Her wisdom is never going to give in –
Now She’s eyeing up the empty space in St Rule’s Tower.



Helen Evans runs two poetry projects: 'Inner Room', and 'Poems for the path ahead'. Her poems feature in Mariscat Sampler One (Mariscat Press 2024) while her debut pamphlet, Only by Flying (HappenStance Press 2015), was shortlisted for the Callum Macdonald Memorial Award. She holds an MLitt (Distinction) in creative writing from the University of St Andrews. Places her work has appeared include The Rialto, The North, Magma, and Amethyst Review as well as in anthologies, including Coming and Going: Poems for Journeys (HappenStance Press, 2019) and Thin Places & Sacred Spaces (Amethyst Press, 2024).

Winter Doves – a poem by Skip Renker

Winter Doves

Perched on a long limb,
these eight plump Buddhas
know the way
to welcome morning—
no calls, no scramble
for seeds, not one
preens. Sunlight
honeys the bare branches
of the cottonwood.

We perch, the eight
seem to say, our
faces to the light.
Blue sky billows, grace
rises through patient
roots, this ample day
gathers in our chests.

F.W. “Skip” Renker’s poems have appeared in Awakenings ReviewLeaping Clear, Presence, and many other publications, as well as the Atlanta Review and Passages Northanthologies.  His books are Sifting the Visible (Mayapple Press), Bearing the Cast  (Saint Julian Press), and A Patient Hunger (Atmosphere Press).  Skip’s a graduate of Notre Dame and Duke, and has an MFA from Seattle Pacific University. 

Late Semester Talent Show – a poem by Jennifer Hyde Dracos-Tice

Late Semester Talent Show


Steam wisps from the low roof
of the cafeteria next door.
I watch through chapel windows,
where hanging Christmas wreaths,
dark-rimmed eyes, gaze down at us
sitting in wooden pews. I see her

behind a shadow of brown curls,
hunched over her guitar,
sparrow perched on the lip of the stage.

Her voice pipes above
dozing students, her lyrics rising.
Did I teach her well? Her writing
for class, pure struggle, her fingers
wrapping the pen in a fist. Does her song lift
despite me, my clamp
on nouns and verbs and
form? I don’t know. Just

her single note, light blue,
shearing a line of sky
through this stippled ceiling.

Jennifer Hyde Dracos-Tice (she/her) has poems published in Witness, Psaltery & Lyre, Crab Orchard Review, Literary Mama, Whale Road Review, Still: The Journal (2016 Judge’s Choice Award), and elsewhere. Her first full-length poetry collection, Lodged in The Belly, and her first chapbook, Roar of All Septembers, are forthcoming from Main Street Rag. A long-time high school English teacher with literature degrees from Brown (BA) and Indiana University (MA), she lives in Florida with her wife.

Imperishable – a poem by Sarah Reardon

Imperishable 

All life is vapor, as are our life stories.
All flesh is grass, and so are all its glories.
But there is yet a time to watch the mists,
To search the grass for beauty that persists:
For glints of that which does not fade or wither,
Cannot be bought and worn like gold and silver.
A sight which hints, instead, of things unfading:
Along the shore, a woman wending, wading,
She bends to gather shells she’ll stow away
Collected to give to someone, someday.
Or round the mountaintop, she gathers flowers
And greets a stranger, stops to talk for hours,
Returns home late, and stoops to prayer, not rest,
Refreshed by well-worn paths that guide the blessed.
A gentle spirit, with an open door,
Who gives the tea and bread she has, and more,
She gives an answer for her hope with glee,
That joy that lasts until eternity.

Sarah Reardon is a wife, mother, and former teacher. Her writing has appeared in Plough, Ekstasis Review, Reformed Journal, and elsewhere.

The Rites of Saints and Sparrows – a poem by Clare Morris

The Rites of Saints and Sparrows

31st August in the year of Our Lord 651,
Cuthbert sees a soul ascending star-shod
As Aiden is called heavenward home -
Significance only later learned
When Cuthbert knows his path to tread.

That path, transformed by indifferent tarmac,
Pockmarked with chewing gum and fag ends,
Would take my teenage feet to town.
I’d search for a stone cross in the hedgerow,
Streakbacked with bird lime,
Marking where Cuthbert’s body lay,
Behind the cricket ground,
On his way to his final resting place,
As traffic transported shoppers
To shiny out of town superstores
For Sunday service,
Pilgrims seeking a different shrine.

I’d watch the dunnocks
As they danced from branch to branch,
In daily defiant devotion,
Shrill eleisons amid the exhaust fumes,
Shufflewinged detrivitores,
Their ascetic life more survival than divine office,
Trilling their pater nesters.

15th September, 2024, Common Era,
This morning’s matins light,
Grey with a scuffling of early autumn,
Falls askance
As the organ,
Snoring with Sunday sanctity,
Shudders into being.

Mumbling our mimicked ministrations,
We shuffle eastwards.
There is a pain in my chest
I had not felt before,
Sharp like sorrow
Suddenly recalled.
Hymnbooks fan the air
Like hedge sparrows’ wings…

And there it is again, patterning my private petitions,
The stone cross in another county behind the cricket ground –
I wonder if they are dancing still, my dunnocks,
Along the hedgerow.

There’s a bench there now
So that you can take time to survey
The cross or the traffic,
Listen to the cricket or the birdsong.
Faith wears a different cloth depending on where you stand or sit.
But the effect is the same, I suppose, if the wood holds firm.

Clare Morris is a performance poet, writer and reviewer, based in Devon, UK. Her most recent collection is Devon Maid Walking (Jawbone Collective, 2023). She is the editor of The Jawbone Journal (launch date, May, 2025).

Ambergris – a poem by Mark Trisko

Ambergris

conceived in the bowels of the whale
in the belly of the beast
shielding internal organs
from the sharp, steely beaks of swallowed prey
from rending pain and sorrow
laminated with layers of squid guts and bile
born soft, stygian
with the odor of rotting fish and feces
I am Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego,
unbending, impregnable
thrown into a fiery furnace
liberated by conviction
expelled, ejected
the dung of the whale
I am Noah
floating in the flooded wilderness
adrift in the vastness of oceans
that reflect the colors of teal green
under the burning sunshine
and dark blood aubergine at midnight
I am Jonah
rebellious, defiant
vomited out
washed up on the shore
in the place I was running from
that I was meant to serve
becoming purpose and growth
I am Abraham
hardened from years of service
with a streaky greyish yellow hue
waxy, flammable
a burning candle
a holy offering on the sacrificial altar
I am Lazurus
with a musky, earthy scent
sweet frankincense and myrrh
and my Lord smells the soothing aroma
incense, essence
offered up as a censer from my soul
and knows that my pain has infinite value
and that my sinful past has worth

After retiring recently, Mark James Trisko heard his muses yelling loudly in the night begging him to let their voices be heard. His work has appeared / is scheduled to appear in Valiant Scribe Literary Journal, Spirit Fire Review, Amethyst Review, As Surely As the Sun, and Down in the Dirt. He currently lives in Minnesota, with his beautiful spouse of 47 years, four wonderful children and eight above-normal grandchildren.

High-Rise Heaven – a poem by Patricia Joslin

High-Rise Heaven

1.
Sunday evening slump, body
beat. Heat clings to the balcony
as if overlooking a cauldron.
Clouds clash on the horizon,
a wall of rain the vertical
demarcation between light
and dark. End of a long day
that began early. A fire-filled
sermon (without brimstone)
to dispel hell, the minister’s words
a generous reminder that the divine
exists even in the darkest places.

2.
I wait for the sunset, which
promises to be spectacular.
Summer is memory, trees
wear a tinge of orange-red.
Heat dissipates as dark
draws close. Patience.
Just now, Carolina wrens
rest on the rail to discuss
the evening ahead, then fly.
Distant planes align
to make their descent
into nightfall, into dreams.

Patricia Joslin is a poet and essayist living in Charlotte, North Carolina. Her chapbook, I’ll Buy Flowers Again Tomorrow: Poems of Loss and Healing, was published in 2023. Poems have appeared in Kakalak, Tipton Poetry Journal, New Note Poetry, Eunoia Review, Wilderness House Literary Review and the San Antonio Review. Patricia is a former educator and now an active volunteer in the community working to address issues of food insecurity. She loves live jazz, chamber music, solo travel, bold red wine, and her four young grandsons.