(“Canada Geese”, watercolor, Jane Kohut-Bartels)
Utilizing Tanka form and Haiku.
Autumn wind startles–
Lowered to an ominous
Key—Ah! Mournful sounds!
The fat mountain deer listen-
Add their bellowing sorrow.
The gingko filters the sunlight, the ground a crescent- printed cloth fit for a yukata. It hits my hands and feet, creating white scars that do not burn. I welcome the sun. My bones grow thin.
This passage, from summer to fall, eternal movement of Universal Design, counts down the years I have left. There is so much more to savor. Two lives would not be enough.
Tsuki, a beggar’s cup too thin to fatten the road, still shines with a golden brightness, unwavering in the chill aki wind. The Milky Way reigns over all.
Sharp moon cuts the sky
The fierce wind from the mountains
Disturbs dragonflies.
Jane Kohut-Bartels
Copyrighted, 2019
Tags: Haibun, Haiku, poetry, season's change, tanka
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