Swan song

The moon hangs senseless,
its swells all aglow
contained in essences unguessed,
or unremembered.

The sun dies in front of our eyes,
its fires all but claimed,
mortgaged to the teeth,
unable further to dim.

The stars still hold their own, it seems.
Orion still hunts the bear,
faithful mutt dogging his footheels,

bow at the ready, at least until
one or another of its strings
explodes across the sky,
uncontrolled, reckless.

If there’s a lesson in it for us,
mudbound, entwined, encoiled
in rumored codes, blind to the stipulations
of our own existence,

it will be told too late,
our gasps of recognition
insufficient to sustain us.

Friday haiku 6

Today’s haiku is actually a tanka, just to see if you’re paying attention. As always, you can respond in haiku if you wish, or not in haiku, for that matter. Enjoy.

A cardinal, its fire
blazing red,
on the last green branch
summer hopes
frozen

Piston

From the poet’s dictionary

noun \ˈpis-tən\
a sound like a fist, like rain,
like fat drops on hardpan,
like a screen door flapping,
like gasoiline on skin,
like burning sand,
like the smell of coal ash
at ten below zero,
like a stain in the heart
that cannot be removed,
like every slamming, crushing,
fierce and mortal thing
that cannot be undone,
except by love.

See also grief.

Friday haiku 4

On a gloomy Friday.

Just now
a chill wind
winter comes early

Out of the wild

My poor broken child,
Has life been unkind?
Is there no one to lift you?

Your time, it’s true, was dark
A world of silhouettes, cigarette smoke,
A place where light faltered,
Intimidated, burdened
With the smell of whiskey.

The wind blew tough at night,
When only fear lit the path ahead.

So here we are, the last of us,
Swizzle-eyed and weary,
Our wounds only for imagining;

I find these signs vexing.
Into the night with us, then
Let’s take what we can carry,
Let the rest decay.