scent of a rose (haibun)

©Clr'15
©Clr’15

She brushes her hair with her brush, the one with the ivory handle, Papa brought her on his last trip. Staring into the mirror she makes faces like she did when she was a child. How she loved playing this game with Papa. They would take turns making faces and the other had to guess who or what they were imitating. For her it was usually insects or birds and that was where she got her nickname. Papa always called her, “Ma petite Luciole, you are the light of my life.”

Five years have passed since then but she wonders if l’avarice has taken over her Papa, she has started to call monsieur l’étourneau.  He says he is still looking for that special treasure and when he finds it, he will return for good. She looks out at the birdfeeder near her bedroom window. She huffs out of frustration. That starling is stealing all the seeds again…such a greedy little thing it can be!

She misses her Papa and especially since her Maman died in childbirth three years ago. She still has a difficult time to be happy around la petite Colibri. They nicknamed her after hearing her moan in her bed at night putting herself to sleep. Pauvre petite Colibri, she thought. She had the same emerald green eyes of Maman.  How she craved for the long ago laughter of her Papa.

They had all they needed, she reasoned. Her father had inherited le Manoir des Chèvrefeuilles as well as their maison de campagne in Marseilles when maman passed and yet…

She would write to him later this afternoon, she thought, gazing at her silver pheasant feather quill pen. She would ask Colibri to paint a huge soleil to bring Papa back home soon. She sighs and drapes the silk lavender shawl over her bare shoulders and runs down for le petit dejeuner sur la terasse with her Grandmaman and sister.

https://www.etsy.com/listing/82464638/silver-pheasant-feather-quill-pen-for
https://www.etsy.com/listing/82464638/silver-pheasant-feather-quill-pen-for

Searching for scents
no fragrance compares
this lonely silk road

© Tournesol ’15/11/15

Carpe Diem The Silk Road

Translations:

luciole = firefly
avarice= greed
étourneau = starling
colibri = hummingbird
maison de campgagne = country home

rhythm of the moment (haibun – haiga)

Have you ever noticed when you are driving in a town or city and listening to music in the car, people walking by seem to be walking to the beat?  Sometimes the music is fast paced and you can’t help but notice the hips sway, the arms doing their one-two,one-two movement.  Perhaps you have changed channel a few times to see who moves best or the most to the rhythm.  Maybe you are with a friend and he or she points some people out…heck, even dogs are walking to the beat!

Then you may be strolling through a park with your ear-buds, listening to your tunes and you cannot help but move to the movement in time with the music floating in your ears.  If it is upbeat, and you are walking on a city sidewalk, that could actually be a risk to the safety to you and others.  Better tone the music down to something more mellow and mosey along ready to stop, walk around or step off the sidewalk at times.  Yes, yes, you have met those friends who walk three and four in a row refusing to break their group of four.

Even if you do not have music to carry you when you go for a walk, you can certainly hear something that will have a beat that can carry you at a certain tempo.  The beeping at the red light for visually impaired to cross has a nice honk to it and even when it stops, it still echoes for a few blocks as you walk to that beat. The rattle of a three wheeler down the street, the repetitive clang of a loose hub cap or the click click of those nice pumps across the street.  I prefer the steady thump of my favourite boots when I’m in a good mood.

The best of all of course, is walking either just after dawn or before dusk, the conference of fowls who play, chatter, talk about their day, mother robin singing her bedtime stories to her nestling.  It is a cacophony of chirps of various intonations and if you close your eyes you can imagine you are in the woods somewhere alone just you and nature.  Your heart beats quicker at first until the tones simmer down and you watch the sun set…

magenta pools

silence dips
pools of magenta
hum of my breath

© Tournesol ’15

CDHK

FOLI (there is no movement without rhythm)
original version by Thomas Roebers and Floris Leeuwenberg

carpet of colours Troiku ~ Haiga

coloured leaves beauty

crunch echoes
blanket of leaves on lawns
lift spirits

leaves steps

crunch echoes
autumn melody
happy refrain

lawn covered with leaves

blanket of leaves on lawns
add lively colours, before
deep freeze

blue skies

lift spirits
brilliant blue skies
clouds forming smiles

~~~~

crunch echoes
blanket of leaves on lawns
lift spirits

crunch echoes
autumn melody
happy refrain

blanket of leaves on lawns
add lively colours, before
deep freeze

lift spirits
brilliant blue skies
clouds forming smiles

© Tournesol’15

CDHK – Happiness

Yuletide blessings (troiku)

© Clr '14-12-11
© Clr ’14-12-11

On church steps
showered with blessings
Christmas Eve snowfall

on church steps
laughing, hugging, well wishes
Yule tidings

showered with blessings
watches her loved ones savour
love spiced stuffing

Christmas Eve snowfall
florets floating softly – rest
on rosy cheeks

© Tournesol ’15

Prompt at Carpe Diem Haiku Kai was “Happiness” today

dementia (haiku)

(c) Clr’14

Thinks of her mother
leaving this world unknowingly
will she forget too?

© Tournesol ‘15/11/02

Haiku Horizons “forget”

late night walk (Shasei- troiku)

Tonight I walked home from work after eleven and just soaked up what I saw and stopped a few moments to take photos to capture those moments. I got to the Métro and wrote this troiku immediately before losing that feeling I had just a few moments ago.  Of course these are ” Shasei” rather than haiku developped into a troiku.

IMG_4015
© Cheryl-Lynn R. ’15

Walking home
slippery streets mock
autumn leaves
~
walking home
beauty swells in the light
silent night
~
slippery streets mock
I walk gingerly
catch a twilight view
~
autumn leaves mock
cold and wet – yet,
colour my world

© Tournesol ’15

Carpe Diem Haiku Writing Techniques #16 (Shiki’s) Shasei

“Though this technique is often given Shiki’s term Shasei (sketch from life) or Shajitsu (reality), it has been in use since the beginning of poetry in the Orient. The poetic principle is “to depict the thing just as it is“…He favored the quiet simplicity of just stating what he saw without anything else happening in the haiku. He found the greatest beauty in the common sight, simply reported exactly as it was seen, and ninety-nine percent of his haiku written in his style. Many people still feel he was right.”

 

Coming of age (haibun)

She thinks of times her muse would visit and literally just take over.  Looking over old poems of various forms, she has no choice but to believe this must be so because of the depth and eloquence of some poetry.  No, it must be some spiritual intervention, that has to be the answer.

September had thirty days of haiga and that may have forced the hand of her muse a bit.  Then she dared to attempt the challenge of 31 days of poetry at OctPoWriMo and now she is feeling the crunch. Her muse may be a little passive aggressive.  And she should be!  Why should she expect her muse to produce “on command”?  And so she waits tonight at one in the morning …

humble insights,
pen cannot scratch the surface
muse is ripe

muse is ripe
wildflower blossoms
even in autumn

© Tournesol ’15

Written for Ronovan Writes Poetry prompt 68 – Hiaku – Pen & Muse

shaking the blues (haibun)

Feeling this heavy weight this morning makes it difficult to find her get up and go. She shuffles to the shower, hoping to wash off fragments of gloom and doom. Caffeine doesn’t even work. She puts on her coat and wraps her long scarf around her to brave the cool autumn air on her way to work.

© Cheryl-Lynn R.'15
© Cheryl-Lynn R.’15

grey clouds linger
trees brave autumn winds
shaking off the blues

© Tournesol ’15

Written for Monday Writes

verses

soupçon de mélancholie (haibun)

©Clr'15
©Clr’15

 

It’s been getting colder in the past week. Nights have dipped below freezing point and she has mixed feelings about that.  Ragweed allergies will finally cease;  daytime walks are still splattered with colours but the nights walking home from her late shifts will now be cold.

On her way back from her favourite grocery, Thai Foo, greens in her backpack,  she cannot not help but notice sweeping changes with nature around her.  Many trees have lost most of their leaves, and the late bloomers who also shed the latest, still hold some beautiful colours.  The yellow turned to a dark orangey tint, the maples were an even brighter red and one tree she could not name had yellowed leaves with dark brown strips of seeds hanging.  It truly looked like a Hallowe’en decoration. How totally apropos, she thought.

© Clr,15
© Clr,15

She knew there was about a  week left of signs of life through tints and hues.  After October 31st…the goblins will have eaten up most of life’s colours. November will prowl like rodents lurking garbage bins; life will appear barren  day by day.  She admires the last photos she took today, wishing this week could drag on a few more months.  Le mois des morts(the month of the dead)  is what they call November in her region.

novembre se faufile
soupçon de mélancolie
envahit

November slips in
drop of melancholy
spills over

© Clr'15
© Clr’15

Heeding Haiku with Chèvrefeuille and MindlovemiserysMenagerie

Exploring poetry in all its forms.

daybreak nudge (haiku)

BFF (Best Feline Friend) Bette

pre dawn call
stares at the human
sleeping

sleeping
jabs one front paw
ever gently

ever gently
nudges for a cuddle
to be stroked

to be stroked
love’s laboured gest
purrs of delight

purrs of delight
returns to heavenly bliss
on makeshift bed

© Tournesol ’15

Three Word Wednesday – Jab – Laboured – Makeshift