A Christmas Peril
by Kent M. Pitman
’Twas the first iceless Christmas, and all through the world,
it was warm enough now the last snowflake had swirled.
The stockings were hung in the humid night air
in mem’ry of times when St. Nick would come there.
The children were sweating atop a clean sheet.
They wished for a way to escape the night heat.
Though stories of polar caps had their appeal,
they were hard to explain--they just sounded surreal:
I’d point to the freezer then wave my arms wide,
“It was just like in there--but they had it outside.”
The kids couldn’t fathom the words they were told
of an ocean of water, turned to ice by the cold.
So my tales of such things must have ended up boring.
All I know, in the end, is it had them soon snoring.
Then I kissed their small foreheads, and looked to the sky,
and thought about how we had got here, and why.
As I watched through the fog and the mist and the haze,
A twinkle of something soon captured my gaze.
I patiently watched. As it moved to our shore,
each moment that passed, I could see a bit more.
An orca, eight dolphins, giving someone a tow,
Even at SeaWorld I’d seen no such show.
The figure approached and I poured up some nog,
It was plainly St. Nick coming out of the fog.
But to my horror, slung over his back,
not presents but coal brimmed out of the sack.
Nor was it the clean kind, or some such confusion.
He was angry, you see, there could be no illusion.
“You’re killing the planet,” he said with a frown,
It’s time you got busy and turned that around.
He fussed and he fretted. He was loaded for bear--
Not that any were left, I thought with a scare.
And just about then, I screamed--and it woke us!
It had all been a dream, but in frightening focus.
I told of my dream to my kids, still sheet white,
“It was awful,” I said, “but may soon be our plight.”
We wrote up a letter to Santa that night,
It was different than normal, and much more contrite.
“Dear Santa,” it started, and went on from there
We wanted him knowing we really do care.
“We’ve given no thought to the plight of the elves
as the ice has been melting and falling from shelves.
We’ve taken your toys for a number of years,
it’s time we helped you, lest more ice turn to tears.”
“Don’t worry about us, we’re feeling a shift,
The Earth, by itself, is enough of a gift.
Whatever it takes, after this Christmas Carol,
it’s time we wake up to our planet in peril.”
So we propped up the letter, with cookies and tea,
And I tucked in the kids, feeling finally free.
There was still much to do, in the days up ahead
But for now I was calm again, ready for bed.
As I drifted, I heard a voice, ever so slight,
“Merry Christmas to all, and to all a cool night!”
This is version 1.1, updated to correct some slight wording glitches.
Version 1.2 exists, correcting some problems with meter.
Copyright © 2008 Kent M. Pitman. All Rights Reserved.
http://www.nhplace.com/kent/
Permission to copy, to distribute, and to perform or publicly display this work is granted provided that the work, including this copyright notice, is copied in its entirety, that the work is not modified, that no derivative works are created, and that the use is non-commercial. All other uses require negotiated permission.
If you got value from this post, please "rate" it.


Salon.com
Comments
I feel the anger in this. I love how it is woven in the poem.
rated for holiday consciousness
By the way, just now I updated this slightly to be version 1.1. In the original version, it had used the rhyme word "night" twice and I had to run out of the house for a social commitment so didn't have time to fix it. In this new version, I changed:
"I told of my dream to my fam'ly that night"
to
" I told of my dream to my kids, still sheet white"
That's the only change, but it keeps there from being two "night" rhymes practically next to each other. Even without the rhyme it would have been annoying, but with it was too much.
It's fine to distribute either version but the newer ones I think is better. Please let me know if you disagree.
Yeah, it's a myth.
rated, obviously
Organian and IdahoSpud44, thanks—glad you liked it.
I found it creative and topical Kent.
Good job........this poem is from someone who cares deeply about
humanity and the planet......
thanks!
Then again, as I'm typing this comment about abstractions, my wife is nearby reading something else I wrote and howling about the embarrassingly stupid typos I made, so don't be thrown off by this to thinking I'm too full of myself and my literary capabilities... She keeps my ego properly grounded.
So call it what you like, I'm glad you stopped by to read it, and that you enjoyed it.
Excellent work. Made me chuckle, frown, smile in awe, and giggle all at the same time (which isn't easy).
Thumbed.
May you have a Christmas as conscientiously and lovingly crafted at this poem.