Haiku- Spring 2026
still more spring rain,
my childhood's untied shoelace
in the flooded swale
a tulip blossom
filled with all the excitement
of a yesterday
a goldfinch flying
from the flowering dogwood
in time with the sun
Necessity of DaybreakTable and cupboards, glassware quotients,the map of the wall calendar maintainedby an alarm, the usual scene dashedwith categorical values continuinga measured program of right angleswhile lay of the land shares memoryas old as rain that praises the sun,rambled upon by the value of eons.That can be the partial for all but whatI know is a check on my head while voiceaffairs its call for an unregistered heart,japes a coo across the fertile ground,glistens on dew from mute of the yin,thwacks the brink of nagging persistence.An astounding break, that, when the latchslips the lag screw of tenuous physics.A bout of news to be kept in the darkis perhaps some ridiculous thunder, or justoutside is just marbled clouds unpluggedby violet synergies of a succulent windwhich is innocence threading elsewherelost to a categorized self. Inevitability, it must,equally though, must not, behavioral adjust,then I’ve enough. Buds break through allwith a power that’s so much more a far less.
Beneath youthe amethyst caves vibrate and groan,the earth’s emptiness.Mushrooms of pleasuremolt into dark cupolas.Now a shade falls over you,a chittering, the talk of infinitesimal spiritstoo slight for understanding.You open yourselfyour mouth your eyes your foreheadwith a sharp stone carried from childhood.
--Ernest JésùyẹmíTuck inside a myth your rent violin:To touch the light, you must believe firstIn the lucid ghost of grief. EleganceOf marvels. Tale away the vibrant fever.The angel of bleeding abides not the clear unseenDay. Abel hymns only dewlight there. TheQuiet trees divine their fused shadowsOver the earth; beneath the shadows, roots—A gorgeous network of thirst. SpringLike a ball.A wild butterfly communesWith the flourishing secrets inside a flamingViolet flower. Arrive peacecountry.Voice be clipped awake. HarvestThe violin in Summer. The mouth, smallHumbling god, tightens to a lute.
--Robert BlySuppose you see a face in a ToyotaOne day, and you fall in love with that face,And it is Her, and the world rushes byLike dust blown down a Montana street.And you fall upward into some deep hole,And you can't tell God from a grain of sand.And your life is changed, except that now youOverlook even more than you did before;And these ignored things come to bury you,And you are crushed, and your parentsCan't help you anymore, and the woman in the ToyotaBecomes a part of the world that you don't see.And now the grain of sand becomes sand again,And you stand on some mountain road weeping.
-W. H. AudenA cloudless night like thisCan set the spirit soaring:After a tiring dayThe clockwork spectacle isImpressive in a slightly boringEighteenth-century way.It soothed adolescence a lotTo meet so shameless a stare;The things I did could notBe so shocking as they saidIf that would still be thereAfter the shocked were deadNow, unready to dieBur already at the stageWhen one starts to resent the young,I am glad those points in the skyMay also be counted amongThe creatures of middle-age.It's cosier thinking of nightAs more an Old People's HomeThan a shed for a faultless machine,That the red pre-Cambrian lightIs gone like Imperial RomeOr myself at seventeen.Yet however much we may likeThe stoic manner in whichThe classical authors wrote,Only the young and richHave the nerve or the figure to strikeThe lacrimae rerum note.For the present stalks abroadLike the past and its wronged againWhimper and are ignored,And the truth cannot be hid;Somebody chose their pain,What needn't have happened did.Occurring this very nightBy no established rule,Some event may already have hurledIts first little No at the rightOf the laws we accept to schoolOur post-diluvian world:But the stars burn on overhead,Unconscious of final ends,As I walk home to bed,Asking what judgment waitsMy person, all my friends,And these United States.
--W.H.AudenSimultaneously, as soundlessly,Spontaneously, suddenlyAs, at the vaunt of the dawn, the kindGates of the body fly openTo its world beyond, the gates of the mind,The horn gate and the ivory gateSwing to, swing shut, instantaneouslyQuell the nocturnal rummageOf its rebellious fronde, ill-favoured,Ill-natured and second-rate,Disenfranchised, widowed and orphanedBy an historical mistake:Recalled from the shades to be a seeing being,From absence to be on display,Without a name or history I wakeBetween my body and the day.Holy this moment, wholly in the right,As, in complete obedienceTo the light’s laconic outcry, nextAs a sheet, near as a wall,Out there as a mountain’s poise of stone,The world is present, about,And I know that I am, here, not aloneBut with a world, and rejoiceUnvexed, for the will has still to claimThis adjacent arm as my own,The memory to name me, resumeIts routine of praise and blame,And smiling to me is this instant whileStill the day is intact, and IThe Adam sinless in our beginning,Adam still previous to any act.I draw breath; that is of course to wish,No matter what, to be wise.To be different, to die and the cost,No matter how, is ParadiseLost of course and myself owing a death:The eager ridge, the steady sea,The flat roofs of the fishing villageStill asleep in its bunny,Though as fresh and sunny still, are not friendsBut things to hand, this ready fleshNo honest equal, but my accomplice now,My assassin to be, and my nameStands for my historical share of careFor a lying self-made city,Afraid of our living task, the dyingWhich the coming day will ask.
--Mathew ZapruderI commit to vote becauseI'm pretty sure I grabwhatever I need from the worldand place it in my mindwhich is getting incrementallylike the commonsundeniably more toxic and sadyes I too walk aroundconsidering my intractable problemscomplaining it's too latefor more sonataseverything is already too beautifulmusic and anger won't save usyet I commit to talkingearnestly with Sarahabout the school boardit will be night and we will be sittingshoulder to shoulderat the old table we loveeach holding a pencillike grade school children left alone at lastthen in the morningbefore our son wakesI commit to holdingthis tiny bit of quicksilver(quick in the sense of livingin its very molecular natureit wants to usefully combine with yours)in my palm and to walkingup to the blue mailboxI pass most morningsin that familiar silenceunder those nameless little treeswhen all things that surround me wait
--Bert MeyersBirds drip from the trees.The moon's a little goatover there on the hill;dawn, as blue as her milk,fills the sky's tin pail.The air's so cold a gas stationglitters in an ice-cube.The freeway hums like a pipewhen the water's on.Streetlights turn off their dew.The sun climbs down from a roof,stops by a house and strikesits long match on a wall,takes out a ring of brass keysand opens every door.
--Anne Waldman“beautiful things fill every vacancy”for C. D. Wrightfilaments of her giftpersistent mysteriespalpable consciousnessa world of namingof ablutions in timefighter instinctaction, the pressing in,closing inheart thrumsfor a powerful imagedazzling light:redemption!to reassess language,its tactilityemotion, lyric, obliqueirony twists, shifts bypulse & ear, resilienther consummate body poeticsecho into nightit hits us what is now absentfrom every bouquetcut like flowers before their time
--Anne WaldmanRest you by this various planetor lounge in the sky loungebe my guest I'll take you there& introduce you around & showyou the sky ropes & thecity maps and the world asflat as a map and the worldas round as a lively facewith head & atmosphereand the sky as breath and the riveras chant and the sun as ariaaria for breathing and for lovingaria for the dancing light & shadowlight & shadow upon the dancing globelight & shadow on the child's armsin a park under trees & towers,light on the fresh canvas, the painteron the roof of West 2Ist Streetunder thoughtful shadow,shadow on spoons in the metal drawerthe zebra plant yearning for lightlight for the eyes of Beethoven, shadowinside the piano, mellow now violentshadow out of the piano, power in thelight of the rain, sweet strings of light,shadow under my desk, big black boots in winter,light through friendly wordson shadowy telephone wires,light in health & shadow in health,illuminate moon rocks! knowledge from shadow,light from darkest handwriting, print as lightand white paper, shadow
--Louise GlückDo you know what I was, how I lived? You knowwhat despair is; thenwinter should have meaning for you.I did not expect to survive,earth suppressing me. I didn't expectto waken again, to feelin damp earth my bodyable to respond again, rememberingafter so long how to open againin the cold lightof earliest spring--afraid, yes, but among you againcrying yes risk joyin the raw wind of the new world.