Saturday, March 31, 2012

Haibun



                        THE WOMAN IN PINK
 
In a café, a woman with long bleached hair, heavy make-up, dressed in pink:  slacks, shirt, spiky sandals.  She reads aloud her horoscope.

“You will soon meet your dream man.”

Looking at her young son, she says, “Henry, you’re my dream man, aren’t you?”

Henry shrugs, frowns and walks away.
 
                    beading sweat
                    a teacup rattles
                    on its saucer

Gean, Sept. 2010
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Saturday, March 24, 2012

Haiku



                         first day of spring
                         daffodils flown in
                         from Ireland

                         a sun-gold morning
                         rain soaked dafodils
                         lose their droop

                         a wild daffodil
                         in the ravine-
                         the distance I've come

Simply Haiku, March 2011
Haiku Society of America, Anthology 2011
Acorn, Winter 2010
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Sunday, March 18, 2012

Senryu



                                  an old cemetery
                                  the town's history
                                  in crumbling stone

                                   Moonset, spring 2009
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Sunday, March 11, 2012

Tanka Sequence

ABANDONED

the summer sun
fills up the empty house
for no one's pleasure;
each day the same as before
the same as tomorrow

blacks holes for windows
tilting porches and worn paint
the flying dust
spiraling into ghosts
of decades past

it groans and creaks
and settles into dust
the decaying house
its cries ignored
its past forgotten

Modern English Tanka, July 2009

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Sunday, February 19, 2012

Haibun



CHANGES

With our move from a suburb of New York City to a small rural town two counties northward I’ve become a gardener.  I’ve become acquainted with peonies, spirea, hosta, creeping juniper,  broomplant, barberry, sedum, king’s gold cyprus, and others. Some in the garden, some on a list to be planted in the future.

early evening–
one more lily planted
before dark

I’ve become a seeker of vistas–the hills, fields and meadows, the ponds and streams, spilling over their banks after spring and autumn rains, shrinking to muddy, algae laced puddles, thin trickles and stony bottomed dry beds in the summer, freezing from a layer of slush to a solid block of ice in winter.

late March
the swept clean look
of brown hills

I’ve become a dreamer of skies and clouds, a sitter with a book and a stopped clock, a camera with eyes snapping images to preserve in memory and on paper.

roadside flower stand–
the autumn mist collects
on empty shelves

I’m a calendar, watching for the cyclical changes, the weather patterns different from the area in the southern part of the state.  Spring is slower to arrive, winter longer.  Summer hotter and autumn more colorful.

a sweeping white field–
the hilltop farm house
casts a small shadow

I’m a hound, stopping and turning my head, my nostrils twitching. Scents are stronger.  Wood smoke, burning leaves, farm animals, freshly mowed hay, wet pines and fermenting leaves.

damp morning
first the lilacs…
then the manure

I'm a stranger to the area so I talk to shopkeepers, tell them my name, ask theirs, smile and wave to people. I let the outside inside.

new friends–
a rainy afternoon
in the diner

Contemporary Haibun On-line, Sept. 2008



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Saturday, February 11, 2012

Tanka



                             sleet and snow falling-
                             before we leave, sage advice
                             from our children;
                             in this progression of life
                             when did we shift roles?

Ash Moon Anthology March 2008
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Haiku

  weekend getaway coffee on the veranda with a gecko Sense  & Sensibility