• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Meg Waite Clayton

New York Times Bestselling Author

  • Meg
    • Bio
    • Short Works
    • Meg’s Writing Process
  • Books
    • The Postmistress of Paris
    • The Last Train to London
    • Beautiful Exiles
    • The Race for Paris
    • The Wednesday Sisters
    • The Four Ms. Bradwells
    • The Language of Light
    • The Wednesday Daughters
    • International Editions
  • Events
  • News
  • Videos
  • Bookgroups
    • The Postmistress of Paris
    • The Last Train to London
    • The Race For Paris
    • The Wednesday Sisters
    • The Four Ms. Bradwells
    • The Language of Light
    • The Wednesday Daughters
    • My Bookclubs
  • Writing Tips
    • Tips for Writers
    • How Writers Get Started
    • On Agent Queries
    • Publishing Tips
  • Contact

December 20, 2010 By Meg Waite Clayton

Poetry Tuesday: an Eclipse, a Solstice, and a Post and Poem by Leslie Lytle

The confluence of winter solstice and lunar eclipse tonight, for me, calls out for poetry – and just in time, I recieved my annual solstice-poem card from my friend and Nashville writing group pal, Leslie Lytle. In addition to being a lovely poet and a friend, Leslie is also the author of Execution’s Doorstep. The photograph is hers, too. I know it’s not quite Tuesday, but I’m posting this today in hopes this lovely poem will enrich your enjoyment of the evening. – Meg
Thirty-something years ago—1979—I began sending hand-crafted solstice cards. The first two cards were illustration-only affairs—a block print from a design carved in wood and a stencil. The next year, I include a poem inside and that was to become the tradition.
The early solstice cards with both text and an illustration were cut-and-paste projects that I drove thirty miles to have printed in those pre-high-tech home printer days. A few of the people on my mailing list tell me they’ve saved all those cards. In some cases, I only have the master, though. Many years I sent all the cards I printed.
The poem has typically been a selection culled from my past year’s cannon. But this year, perhaps because these are harsh times, all of the poems I’d written recently sounded desperate. I was mulling this over, curled up in the duct-taped-together leather recliner I inherited from my grandfather—my favorite chair for thinking and musing. Maybe I wouldn’t do cards this year, or at least, not a poem, and then from that place of wonder where the unpredictable is born, there came the line, “I don’t have a poem this year…”
     As the Nights Get Longer
                    For you who are anxiously waiting
     I don’t
     have a poem this year. You
     have a poem. The poem
     wrote about you
     dreaming you woke up and the morning

     sun glowing behind black branches
     sinks lower and lower in the sky,
     a sleepy sun not quite ready to wake up
     blinking back the brilliance of first light,
     giving in to the sleep
     you want to keep
     sleeping and you whisper
     thank you to the sun
     for granting your wish.
In keeping with the wonder of the solstice
may you find the good in what you shun
and embrace with awe
all that finds you.

Shanti,
Leslie Lytle

Share:

Filed Under: Poetry Tuesdays Tagged With: eclipse, Execution's Doorstep, Leslie Lytle, lunar eclipse, poem, poetry, solstice, winter solstice

Meg Waite Clayton

Meg Waite Clayton is a New York Times and internationally bestselling author of THE LAST TRAIN TO LONDON, a Jewish Book Award finalist based on the true story of the Kindertransport rescue of ten thousand children from Nazi-occupied Europe—and one brave woman who helped them escape. Her six prior novels include the Langum-Prize honored The Race for Paris and The Wednesday Sisters, one of Entertainment Weekly's 25 Essential Best Friend Novels of all time. A graduate of the University of Michigan and its law school, she has also written for the Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The San Francisco Chronicle, Forbes, Runners World, and public radio, often on the subject of the particular challenges women face. megwaiteclayton.com

Primary Sidebar

Categories

  • Book Marketing Tips (23)
  • Bookstores worth Browsing (34)
  • Guest Authors (215)
  • How a Book Gets Published (32)
  • Literary Travel (4)
  • Meg's Posts (388)
  • Poetry Tuesdays (24)
  • Publishing Tips (20)
  • Top Writing Tips (10)
  • Uncategorized (6)
  • Writing Quotes and Other Literary Fun (115)
  • Writing Tips (61)

Archives

Footer

Post Archives

Follow Meg on Goodreads

Follow

  • Facebook
  • Instagram

Copyright © 2022 Meg Waite Clayton · Site design: Ilsa Brink