Photo of Warsaw at Christmas time‘A December Wish’ by Leo Yankevich (with Audio) The Society December 23, 2017 Beauty, Culture, Poetry, Readings, Video 10 Comments You hear the sound of carols from afar. Bright bulbs and tinsel, cinnamon and cloves. Beyond a hill of snow you see a star. Here you can look at stacks of Christmas trees, buy nuts and raisins, fruit from nearby groves, cards inscribed in gold: “joy, love and peace.” And you can eat kielbasa from a spit as fat drips sizzling in makeshift stoves and zlotys are exchanged and butts are lit. Here you can watch fat women slaughter fish if you stand in the line and bear the shoves, pretending that you really have a wish. And for a moment you can close your eyes and can forget the cold that pierces gloves and see a diamond necklace in the skies, or Jesu here among the city doves. Leo Yankevich’s latest books are The Last Silesian (The Mandrake Press, 2005) Tikkun Olam & Other Poems (Second Expanded Edition), (Counter-Currents Publishing, 2012), and Journey Late at Night: Poems & Translations (Counter-Currents Publishing, 2013). He is editor of The New Formalist. More of his work can be found at LeoYankevich.com. NOTE TO READERS: If you enjoyed this poem or other content, please consider making a donation to the Society of Classical Poets. The Society of Classical Poets does not endorse any views expressed in individual poems or commentary. Share this:Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Click to print (Opens in new window)Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window)Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window)Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)Trending now: 10 Responses Joe Tessitore December 23, 2017 Holy cow, Leo! Are you on a roll, or what? If you keep knocking them out of the park like this the rest of us will have to hang up our pens! Bravo Leo! Standing ovation! Joe Reply Reid McGrath December 23, 2017 Liked this one a lot. Reply James Sale December 23, 2017 Quite, quite beautiful. and superbly crafted. There are many small details in this, but the one that affects me most is the now obsolete form of ‘Jesu’ – that stops it having all those modern day evangelical connotations of ‘Jesus’, and instead harks back to those C16th poets and a profundity of faith that conquered worlds, interior and exterior. Reply Amy Foreman December 23, 2017 Love it, Leo! Thank you! Reply Sally Cook December 23, 2017 Dear Leo — Beautiful! What we have lost — our faith and our traditions one by one,. Thanks again, Leo – we owe you so much. Reply Fr. Richard Libby December 23, 2017 That’s beautiful and touching! Reply Leo Yankevich December 24, 2017 I’d like to thank you all for your comments and wish everyone a Merry Christmas. Reply Joseph S. Salemi December 24, 2017 Five tercets with a sustained B rhyme — how many poets can still do that these days? But even more important are the intimacy, the closely-held warmth in the midst of cold, the small details brought into intense focus, and the totally unexpected but striking “Jesu” at the finish. To-notch work, Leo! Reply C.B. Anderson January 17, 2018 Top-notch indeed. I want me some of that sizzling kielbasa I can almost smell from where I sit. Reply Joseph Charles MacKenzie December 24, 2017 The poem is delightfully atmospheric, evoking the charm of ordinary life at Christmastime in a beautiful old square in Warsaw. The appeal to the senses is masterfully reinforced by their actual enumeration in the repeated phrases “You hear,” “you can look,” “you can eat” (which covers taste and smell). Touch is covered by the “shoving” in verse 14. Even the imagination, to complete the experiential nature of the poem, is given a final position of importance as the opening to the world of larger meaning in the apparition of “Jesu among the doves.” Leo Yankevich is one of the original poets of the Ars Poetica Nova, a movement which recognizes the importance of euphony and musicality, the audible aspect of traditional lyric verse. So, I really must insist that the very best way to enjoy “December Wish” is through the poet’s own recording of it in the audio he has been very kind to provide. Reply Leave a Reply Cancel ReplyYour email address will not be published.CommentName* Email* Website Notify me of follow-up comments by email. Notify me of new posts by email. Δ This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Joe Tessitore December 23, 2017 Holy cow, Leo! Are you on a roll, or what? If you keep knocking them out of the park like this the rest of us will have to hang up our pens! Bravo Leo! Standing ovation! Joe Reply
James Sale December 23, 2017 Quite, quite beautiful. and superbly crafted. There are many small details in this, but the one that affects me most is the now obsolete form of ‘Jesu’ – that stops it having all those modern day evangelical connotations of ‘Jesus’, and instead harks back to those C16th poets and a profundity of faith that conquered worlds, interior and exterior. Reply
Sally Cook December 23, 2017 Dear Leo — Beautiful! What we have lost — our faith and our traditions one by one,. Thanks again, Leo – we owe you so much. Reply
Leo Yankevich December 24, 2017 I’d like to thank you all for your comments and wish everyone a Merry Christmas. Reply
Joseph S. Salemi December 24, 2017 Five tercets with a sustained B rhyme — how many poets can still do that these days? But even more important are the intimacy, the closely-held warmth in the midst of cold, the small details brought into intense focus, and the totally unexpected but striking “Jesu” at the finish. To-notch work, Leo! Reply
C.B. Anderson January 17, 2018 Top-notch indeed. I want me some of that sizzling kielbasa I can almost smell from where I sit. Reply
Joseph Charles MacKenzie December 24, 2017 The poem is delightfully atmospheric, evoking the charm of ordinary life at Christmastime in a beautiful old square in Warsaw. The appeal to the senses is masterfully reinforced by their actual enumeration in the repeated phrases “You hear,” “you can look,” “you can eat” (which covers taste and smell). Touch is covered by the “shoving” in verse 14. Even the imagination, to complete the experiential nature of the poem, is given a final position of importance as the opening to the world of larger meaning in the apparition of “Jesu among the doves.” Leo Yankevich is one of the original poets of the Ars Poetica Nova, a movement which recognizes the importance of euphony and musicality, the audible aspect of traditional lyric verse. So, I really must insist that the very best way to enjoy “December Wish” is through the poet’s own recording of it in the audio he has been very kind to provide. Reply