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Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays!

12/24/2020

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For the holiday season this year, I wanted to share my "Christmas Crab" poem, in hopes of bringing a little joy to the world with these beautiful, colorful crabs! Though this year has been grim, there is still much in the world to celebrate, such as Christmas Crabs performing their mating rituals uninterrupted. I look forward to a time when we humans can get back on track. I wish you all peace and pray for a better year in 2021!
The Red Crabs of Christmas Island

From the forest, males are sprawling.
Over craggy cliffs, they’re crawling,
scuttling toward the sea.
 
Into sandy shores, they furrow,
digging a protective burrow,
near the sounding sea.
 
Now the frantic females hurry.
To the waiting males they scurry,
skittering toward the sea.
 
Eggs are laid where water’s creeping.                                                                       
Waves come closer, sweeping, sweeping
egg sacs out to sea. 
 
Baby crabs, born in the ocean,                              
synchronize their sideways motion.                    
Millions leave the seas,                                   
 
and head back to the trees.

published in The National Geographic Book of Nature Poetry, 2015, ed. J. Patrick Lewis, 
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When Pat Lewis asked me for a poem for this upcoming anthology, I had several ideas. One of them was to write a poem using Christmas metaphors. Here it is:

The Red Crabs of Christmas Island
 
The crabs of Christmas Island,
work hard to give their gifts. 
They scuttle miles from forest homes,
and crawl down craggy cliffs.
 
The female crabs lay treasures,
then wrap them in a sac.
They leave their gifts for tides to take,
and then they double back.
 
In one month, newborn crablets
come tumbling from the foam.
Then, like their parents, they climb up
to find a forest home.



But though I was happy with the Christmas metaphors I managed to squeeze into this version, I was ultimately unhappy with this poem, and drafted another version (the one above). I'm glad I did!

Here's to a new year of poetry, light and happiness. Wishing you all the best in 2021!
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24 Comments

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    B. J. Lee is a children’s author and poet. Her picture book, There Was an Old Gator Who Swallowed a Moth, is launching with Pelican Publishing on February 15, 2019. She has poems in 25 poetry anthologies published by  Little, Brown, Wordsong, BloomsburyUK, National Geographic, Otter-Barry Books, Pomelo Books, and Chicken Soup for the Soul. She has worked with anthologists Lee Bennett Hopkins, J. Patrick Lewis and Kenn Nesbitt. She has written poems for such children’s magazines as Spider, Highlights and The School Magazine. Follow her on Twitter @bjlee_writer.

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    Includes my poem "Skateboard Girl"

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    Includes my poem "The Red Crabs of Christmas Island"

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    Coming in 2018 National Geographic's book of US: 200 Poems of People, Places, and Passions (edited by J. Patrick Lewis.)
    Will include my poem, "Groundhognostication"

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    Includes my story, "Alice and Snowball"

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    Includes my poem, "High Dive"
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    Includes my nominated poem, "Dream Train"
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    Includes my nominated poem, "The Tortoise's Encounter"
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    Includes my nominated poem, "The Legend of the Flying Dutchman"

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    Includes my poem, "A Streetcar Named Happily Ever After"

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