Haiku vol. 2
May 24, 2020
These haiku were written between the end of last year and the first half of 2020. So they include the first months of the coronavirus lockdown in the UK. The order has been somewhat rearranged from the order in which they were written. I hope they will be of interest to people who like Basho, Ikkyu, and other Buddhist hermit poets.
1.
 Through shining roof tiles 
 the reflection of a bird 
 flies out of this world.
 
2.
Stones rise with each wave
like ballerinas en pointe
then fall with a click.
3.
 A light grey drizzle, 
 bright petals in the gutter – 
 Thursday afternoon.
 
4.
 Dream of a woodland 
 beside the road, steeped in mist, 
 trees drowning in mist.
 
5.
 When we meet again 
 it may be in the haunted 
 forest of our youth.
 
6.
Yesterday three geese 
 flew over the house – today, 
 a sky full of rain.
 
7.
 An unkempt garden – 
 two pillars but only one 
 protector lion.
 
8.
 Semi-detached home – 
 a tree caught by a street lamp. 
 Empty sky above.
 
9.
 Pink blossom falling – 
 it’s business as usual 
 in other kingdoms.
 
10.
 Beautiful spring day. 
 Washing hanging on the line – 
 trees still have no leaves.
 
11.
 Blue blanket, white cloths. 
 My shadow on warm concrete – 
 nowhere else to be.
 
12.
 There’s water rushing 
 in the cool darkness beneath 
 this blossoming street.
 
13.
 Everything we make 
 feels the gentle push of time 
 like this old brick wall.
 
14.
 I’m waiting to hear 
 birdsong on the roof again – 
 nothing but silence.
 
15.
 Spring blossoms appear 
 without hurry. Spring blossoms 
 leave without delay.
 
16.
 The old granite wall, 
 here since Victorian times – 
 bursting with snowdrops.
 
17.
 Incandescent moon 
 above this uncertain world – 
 silence can be kind.
 
18.
 There’s nothing between 
 us and countless lonely stars – 
 upward vertigo.
 
19.
 On my daily walk 
 a blackbird virtuoso 
 sings without applause.
 
20.
 Rain on the skylight 
 brings gratitude for shelter – 
 may we all have homes.
 
21.
  Just the same old moon 
 and same old constellations – 
 but who sees them now?
 
22.
 Hazy orange sky. 
 Streets trickle with window-light – 
 stillness everywhere.
 
23.
 Suburban garden: 
 bright plastic and broken tools 
 catch a swell of light.
 
24.
 The freshness of birds 
 singing after weeks of rain – 
 Dartmoor in the sun.
 
25.
 Rain shines on the path.
 Hoods up and heads down, we each
 make our own way home.
 
26.
 Open the window. 
 Listen for inspiration – 
 birdsong after dark.
 
27.
 A lopsided moon 
 hangs beside the empty church. 
 Blurry stars above.
 
28.
 Blue sky, yellow moon 
 obscured by clouds. Streets echo 
 with evening talk.
 
29.
 Stars circle the world 
 of names and maps, maintaining
 anonymity.
 
30.
 Brittle ferns of frost 
 disappear no matter how 
 intricately formed.
 
31.
 Tall trees on the hill. 
 Seagulls caw from the church roof – 
 we’re all hermits now.
 
32.
 Clear sky, empty sky. 
 Brilliance cast on rooftops – 
 look, the harvest moon.
 
33.
Lobelias bloom
along the old granite wall
like they did last year.
34.
 Unlit church beneath 
 a night-blue sky. Chimneys, stars – 
 faint scent of wood smoke.
 
35.
 Looking out at stars 
 as the feedback loops begin. 
 We will disappear.
 
36.
 Writing in the loft
 when suddenly the old church 
 sounds a lonely bell.
 
37.
 September morning, 
 the lake impossibly still – 
 light splashing on leaves.
 
38.
 A quick wind outside – 
 better unpack the blanket 
 for my evening sit.
 
39.
 The neighbours’ wind chimes 
 dance in dark gardens – even 
 stars could blow away.
 
40.
 I take the coast path 
 hoping for inspiration – 
 waves applaud the rocks.
 
41.
 Seasons turn around 
 a eucalyptus rooted 
 beside the steep path.
 
42.
 As the sky darkens 
 a seabird crosses the cove 
 leaving only this.
 
43.
 Rooftops slick with rain. 
 The sky unknowable, blank. 
 What will today bring?
 
44.
 Tyres roar in the wet. 
 Gutters overflow and drip –
 the rain hears nothing.
 
45.
 In meditation 
 we see thought-worlds bud like dew 
 and evaporate.
 
46.
 Fisherman’s lookout 
 on the tourists’ island – 
 now open to the wind. 
 
47.
 Rain on the skylight 
 blurs amber bedroom windows – 
 happy solitude. 
 
48.
 Before work begins 
 I tip sand out of my shoes, 
 breathe fresh autumn air.
 
49.
 Rain all afternoon. 
 The hills are bordered by fog – 
 islands of being.
 
50.
 Bindweed creeps under 
 the sash window. Fine weather. 
 How long will it last? 
 
51.
 Stone houses darken.
 Clicking on windows and tiles –
 Devon in the rain.
 
52.
 Through the rain-streaked glass, 
 against a matte grey sky – 
 geese follow the river.
 
53.
 The quiet willow 
 allows its leaves to whisper – 
 wind stirs on the path.
 
54.
 The deleted world 
 lies behind October mist – 
 one undo away.
 
55.
 My brother’s garden 
 borders a wood of unknown 
 depth and wilderness.
 
56.
 This autumn village 
 has an abundance of time – 
 the tang of coffee.
 
57.
 Caught in sudden rain 
 while looking towards the moor – 
 might have worn a coat.
 
58.
 Autumn-rust acer; 
 garage with blue paint peeling – 
 somebody’s childhood. 
 
59.
 Breathing after rain, 
 a gull calls in the blank sky – 
 stillness in the heart. 
 
60.
  The fact of a crow 
 embedded in blue dawn mist – 
 unspoken question.
 
61.
 This floating world 
 is falling into emptiness. 
 Nothing to see here.
 
62.
 Always rushing past 
 like a metaphor for time – 
 but it’s also wet. 
 
63.
 We play dharma talks 
 in a municipal room – 
 pregnant moon outside. 
 
64.
 Waves break on concrete. 
 Towers of spray rise and fall – 
 boom and hiss repeat.
 
65.
 Carrying shopping. 
 Thinking, thinking – white smoke from 
 a neighbour’s chimney.
 
66.
 Ghosts of rain teem through 
 valley fog, blind to their own 
 brief constellations. 
 
67.
 Wind roars in darkness. 
 Tragedy and farce – this world 
 exposed to cruel stars. 
 
68.
 This delivery 
 of wind and rain is a gift 
 already opened.
 
69.
 Reflections hurry 
 through puddles in market square. 
 World is awareness.
 
70.
 Unknowable sky 
 glitters above this hovel – 
 teeming with buddhas.
 
71.
 The church on the hill 
 stands in darkness – a bell rings 
 suddenly, faintly. 
 
72.
 At home among tors, 
 away from the busy town – 
 cold wind, spacious mind. 
 
73.
 Dark morning. Somewhere, 
 the year turns on its axis – 
 coffee keeps me warm. 
 
74.
 Barefoot winter beach. 
 Remembering not to be 
 lost in memory. 
 
75.
 Morning refreshes 
 the garden with quiet rain. 
 Live simply this year.
 
76.
 Composing haiku 
 while a barn owl calls the hunt – 
 just these empty words. 
 
77.
 Full moon behind clouds. 
 Awareness is all we have – 
 woodsmoke in cold air.
 
78.
 Driving through the mist 
 these words about emptiness 
 appear and then fade.
 
79.
 Goodbye permafrost. 
 Love this momentary world 
 where blind kings maraud.
 
80.
 The fat moon hovers 
 serene above a stone pine. 
 Storm Ciara howls.
 
81.
 Woken by thunder – 
 echoing cacophony 
 from a broken dream. 
 
82.
 Small autistic boy 
 watching trains by the river – 
 love breaks you apart.
 
83.
 Those who look will see 
 primroses among gravestones – 
 time, relentless time. 
 
84.
 Surprise! A slow-worm 
 flicks and writhes as it travels 
 unforgiving realms. 
 
85.
 Still suburban night. 
 Streetlamps and mist. TVs paused – 
 a dream of a dream. 
 
86.
 The onrush of night 
 reveals what’s most important – 
 warmly lit windows. 
 
87.
 Let’s not overlook 
 simple moments of beauty 
 as they come and go. 
 
88.
 There’s a bird sculpture 
 rooted to the driveway gate, 
 desperate to take wing.
 
89.
 Breathing the rain in. 
 Hearing it click on the roof – 
 time’s arrows falling.
 
90.
 Petal-strewn pavement. 
 Blossom falls through an iron fence, 
 soon to be traceless. 
 
91.
 Spring petals brighten 
 the grey stone wall. How they grow 
 without permission.
 
92.
 While the blackbird trills, 
 a woodpecker taps one note – 
 no less important. 
 
93.
 Rain on the skylight.
 Luckily, I have nowhere
 important to be.
 
94.
 Rain on spring flowers. 
 The colour of everything 
 darkens and deepens. 
 
95.
Skylight left open. 
 Rainwater meditation – 
 touch and fade, repeat.
 
96.
 It’s long past midnight. 
 No sound except a light breeze 
 in the willow tree. 
 
97.
 What difference is there 
 between memories and dreams? 
 Morning after rain.
 
98.
 The red flowerhead 
 fallen on the wet, black road 
 seems even brighter. 
 
99.
 Quiet neighbourhood 
 except for blackbirds singing 
 – early evening walk. 
 
100.
 The garden buddha 
 smiling enigmatically 
 in leaf-dappled shade. 
 
101.
 Early evening breeze. 
 Oak leaves rustle. Fractal roots 
 thread the old stone wall. 
 
102.
 The street feels different. 
 Memories drift in the breeze 
 where the willow stood. 
 
103.
 There it is again,
 miles inland, unexpected 
 – the smell of the sea. 
 
104.
 Still no visitors. 
 The blossom has been and gone
 – Devon in late spring. 
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