.
compassion
in the world’s heart
a spent rose
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: something missing
.
compassion
in the world’s heart
a spent rose
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: something missing
.
no one home
yet the woodpecker
keeps knocking
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: bird/animal
.
touching base
I let the anthill
be
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: touch
.
reticence —
how rose petals curl
back
.
Shiki Kukai, May 2012 kigo: rose(s)
.
dandelion clock —
getting up when
it’s time
.
Shiki Kukai, May 2012 free theme: morning habits
.
dirty dishes
even after finger-licking
food
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: meal
.
ballgame prayer
knowing where
the portal lies
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: ball
Inspired by article in Science Daily: see here
.
watermelon seed
the root
of everything
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: root(s)
.
sun and showers
a line of cars stop and go
stop and go
.
NaHaiWriMo
.
light rain –
I leave the cherry blossom
to the birds
.
NaHaiWriMo promt: observation (3)
.
spring sky
on my screen
tag clouds
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: observation
.
rice paper –
how often do I eat
my words
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: writing
.
growing old –
I get to know the back
of my eye
‘
NaHaiWriMo prompt: growing
.
theater night
my dress the same color
as the seats
NaHaiWriMo prompt: Theater
.
lazy Sunday
a choir boy misses
the bus
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: Sunday
diamond jubilee—
a girl practices
her curtsies
.
conflict diamonds—
boy soldiers sharpen
machetes
.
diamonds—
the glaze on this girl’s
eyes
.
In Sketchbook 7 Jan/feb 2012, Haiku Thread ( in John Daleiden’s Touchstone Perspectives)
.
Ides of March-
I cross the road
halfway
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: Ides of March
.
your touch
in the shape of this bowl –
Raku
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: gift; Joys of Japan: Raku
.
Cassiopeia –
in her laughing mouth
sparkle of a star
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: star
.
wiping the plate clean forgiveness
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: food
.
layers –
hidden behind her claws
angel wings
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: two sides
Throughout March, The Haiku Foundation is featuring in its Per Diem, Daily haiku series my selection of haiku of the senses. Rich and sensual, these 31 haiku, by some of the best poets from all over the world, illustrate the interconnectedness of sensory experience. Read it and see how a particular haiku/senryu may evoke an image in one, dominant sensory modality, only to set off a cascade of associations in other modalities. For instance, while the sense of hearing may be in the foreground initially, eventually the senses of smell, touch, temperature, weight or time (or others) may come to be tingled. Uncannily (as we neither expect nor pay attention to it normally), in some way similar to synesthesia, a haiku/senryu gives rise to a 3-D, or multi-modal experience of the world the poet conveys. Read it and see! Every day a new poem; everyday a new test!
The Per Diem series can be read on the Home page of THF
.
at the bottom
of the glass
sentiment
.
In A Hundred Gourds, p. 14, March 2012
.
homework –
drawing a big sun in bright
yellow
NaHaiWriMo prompt: yellow
.
near the stage
the illusion fades –
moth moon
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: opera
.
wearing white
at the moon party –
moonflower
.
Haiku Bandit Society, Moon Viewing Party, February 2012: My haiku got a Dottie Dot Award! Thank you, Dottie!
.
almond blossom
my neighbor pounding cloth
all night
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: laundry
.
white sails
her billowing
skirt
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: wind
.
shooting stars
all you need to know about
sciatica
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: pain