Haibun: Healing with Nature
My solitude shared
night crickets and an owl
the moon must approve
soft moonbeam filters dust motes
a thousand fish swim upstream
–
It is late afternoon, winter by calendar, spring by temperament. The radishes have pushed above the dark soil, and look promising.
Two cats and I are sitting on a retaining wall that retains nothing, except Madame Alfred Carriere and Graham Thomas. They both have climbed to the second story and are looking in the windows, watching us sleep. I am surrounded by budding nature, the canna lilies brush my thighs with tenderness, making room for me. I sigh and relax into the gathering dusk.
Last night I heard the wood owls. Their demonic chattering scared me into the chicken coop to stand guard with a rake, nervous as the hens. Now I know they are only six inches tall and can’t eat me.
When I die, I want my ashes scattered on this garden. Then, my ash-hands will caress the seedlings from below, my ash-heart will take pride in their growth, and my ash-ears will still hear those wood owls.
The moon is rising, a beggar’s cup too thin to fatten the soil. Mourning doves chant their benediction and swallows tumble like sickles in the failing light. The dark embraces all below. I am healed from the day’s tribulations. The sounds of the urban give way to the enchantment of the Night.
The soil our bed
Our classroom and our graves.
Reborn to the world.
–
Jane Kohut-Bartels Copyrighted, 2017-2019
Tags: Haibun
March 6, 2021 at 12:40 am
Reblogged this on Frank J. Tassone and commented:
#Haiku Happenings #5: Jane Kohut-Bartels’ #haibun!
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March 6, 2021 at 4:03 am
thank you, Frank . Am reading Basho on his views on haibun…..so much I have forgotten.
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