Showing posts with label sedoka. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sedoka. Show all posts

Sunday, December 31, 2023

United Haiku and Tanka Society, Songbirds Sedoka Online Journal, Premier Edition, 2023

dawn flushes
across the pale cheeks
of this winter sky

we wonder
if you will make it
through another night

Editor's Choice

Commentary by the editor, an'ya:

A very visually descriptive sedoka by Debbie Strange that utilizes nature in the first tercet and deepens to a human emotion in the second tercet. Her juxtaposition is outstanding, as we see the pale cheeks of that winter sky in the person who may not make it through another night. Debbie also has so easily managed a perfect 3/5/5 rhythm in both verses.

Friday, July 24, 2015

Bright Stars Tanka Anthology, Vol. 3, June 2014

writing
a love song
for you
baiting the hook
reeling you in


beside
the endless highway
murdered
her twin's only son
and his girl


in the forest
ghostly Indian Pipe
e m e r g e s
out of moss and earth
older than I'll ever be


collecting flowers
to press inside my book of you
gathering words
of stone and feathers
acorn poems in my pocket


in the highlands
we are standing stones
leaning
toward each other
f r a g m e n t e d


in my pocket
an opened invitation
I already know
the name of his new wife
the name of my best friend


at the clinic
one pale woman
waiting
while they review
her mammogram


falling
snow stars
melting
in the grace notes
of your hair


you cradle
my stone sorrows
in the leaf
of your palm
sifting me into sand


she flew
from the tropics
to the prairies
carrying orchid leis
for her winter sisters


sitting
on Santa's lap
year after year
she asks for one thing:
a father who stays

come
fly with me
over the mountains
in the curve
of a magpie's black wing


preparing
a nest for you
plucking
blood-tipped raven feathers
from my brooding breast


antelope
dissolving into wind
over the prairie
ancestral bones
remember my name


pine needles
stitch my lips together
a silent vow
the forest has heard
so many broken promises


our breath
wispy quills of maroon
curling
a graceful ballet
in the sky


drawing
a heart in sand
i offer
my beloved's name
to the boundless sea


a fox
on the cabin steps
waiting
our dog asks
if she can go out


black ice
and snow angels
at twilight
we are riven
we are stone


sailing
into midnight
encircled
by stars upon stars
nothing but stars


your lips
a perfect storm
raining kisses
into the chipped bowls
of my unquiet hands


Mother

I see now
with my inner eye
that she always walked alone
beside the waters
that called her name
a small song rang out

a firestorm
is raging in her belly
she rends the heated cloth
and bares the scars
upon her naked breast
she is leaving, she is leaving

after she
is said and dead and done
we are earthbound
dust sparkles
on our wings though
we are still too singed to fly

mother, why
does the torment of your life
still haunt me
daughter, let go
you were never meant
to bear my cross of stone


O (No) Canada

shame on us
thousands of aboriginals
(ab)used
in nutritional experiments
and residential schools

now they search
the dump for bodies
hundreds of missing
and murdered Indigenous sisters
whose spirits wait for justice


Crocodile Tears

Oh, those crocodile tears. You painted your face with them every time you wanted something from me. All it took was a single tear quivering on the tip of your lash, and I would dissolve into a crush of bruised petals beneath your feet. You devoured me with lips dripping lies like honey. When you finally spit me out, I was nothing more than a shadow.

they said
I squandered my only life
on quarter moons
and pennies
for your thoughtlessness


New York Room

(After Edward Hopper, Room in New York, 1932)

Passing an open window on a sobbing afternoon, I catch a fleeting glimpse of you, reading. I wonder if the broken arrows of world news are piercing your conscience, or whether you are charting a new course on the unfolded map of your heart. Perhaps your mind's inward-looking eye is remembering the nothing and everything of me. Your woman in red presses the keys of the piano tenderly, as if they are recalling the song of your flesh, though there is no answering thrum. I avert my knowing gaze from the ache of her unsuspected future.

tableaux
through keyholes
all the things
we wish
we could unsee


1st Place
Writers' Collective/Winnipeg Free Press Short Fiction Contest, 2011


Winged

I came in off my land 20 years ago, weary and beaten down inside and outside. My man was gone. My kids were gone. Now I'm nearly gone. I'm brittle as bone, scarred by the sun, with furrows as deep as those on the land.

thumbing history
through train track-stitched prairie
to Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump
and its mountain
of bleached skulls

I'm the town's school librarian now, and it's a comforting job having out-of-date, yellowing, and dog-eared books as my faithful companions. Books have always seduced me, and I gorge on them like some sweet pleasure that I will soon be denied. The library's fusty air and squeaking floorboards are both soothing and inspiring. This is where I began to work on the book that will bear my name.

at the library
aspiring writers
emerge
from inky cocoons
unfolding new wings

Accompanying each story in my manuscript is a photograph of a derelict building that will soon vanish from the face of the earth. The pictures help to breathe life into the tales told by those forlorn walls. A stately old farmhouse has taken root up on a nearby hill, with a vista of swaying golden wheat surrounding it. Defending the sagging front porch are two gnarled lilac trees that scarcely bloom. The front door dangles askew, and most of the windows are wounded. Inside the house, shreds of decayed curtains and patches of water-stained wallpaper are still visible, but nearly all the paint has peeled away. Lacy cobwebs float everywhere, while puffs of dust rise with each footfall.

dirty thirties
three million acres
d r i f t i n g
in a dust cloud of dreams
over the Atlantic

I'm wary while setting up my tripod. Hunting season is fast approaching, and I've been winged a time or two over the years. I guess I've always looked like something wild. My breathing is slow and easy as I frame the scene. Suddenly, the house on the hill is violently splitting asunder, creaking and groaning like a ship going aground. There is no time to capture the image of the crumpling veteran. As the house willingly surrenders its ghosts, a towering cloud of roiling dust rises over the hill.

wraiths
hover and moan
appearing
then disappearing
into smoke

In the dusk, as I am crawling over the pile of bleached bones that were once a home, white feathers begin to swirl like snowflakes over the wreckage. I look up at the silhouette of a whistling swan gliding across the face of the moon. Then, I put my hands in traces of something that looks and smells a lot like blood.


1st Place (prose excerpt)
Writers' Collective/Winnipeg Free Press Fiction Contest, 2012

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Bright Stars Tanka Anthology, Vol. 5, August 2014

sunlight
floods the bed
we wade
into the billows
and drown


peeking through
midnight's velvet drapes
a spotlight moon
scans the theatre
for fallen stars


the stormy thrum
of our quickening breath
as your lips
wend their way
to the rain in my breast


thirteen
her first boyfriend's
hard slap
some of our memories
are burning brands


he gave me roses
and larks ascending
I offered tanka
bound with strands
of my silvered hair


an eagle
carries off a lamb
still struggling
the new mother grieves
her lost baby


our initials
tattooed on sand
b e t w e e n
heart-shaped tracks
of white-tailed deer


with ink stick
and wolf hair brush
on rice paper
I paint the unlikeliness
of my married name


mourning's
warp and weft
woven
into the tapestry
of war-torn faces


lonesome
these delta blues
blowing through
the broken reeds
of my heart


e x h a l i n g
the unspeakable
slipping-down pain
i n h a l i n g
the unknowable
stripping-down bone


rearranging my (negative) space


ruler

measures the tread of infidels
and your infidelities
incremental reign of words
affection over-ruled
broken-thumbed dictator
the judge declares you out of order

paper clips

clip clippings of your clipped words
to my origami wings
paper-quilled intimate intricacies
bent out of shape
i am undone
by your undoing

tape

unfurls over cutting edge
sticky tongue catching the fly
tearing the tip
zipping the lip
securing your crime scene
and sealing my evident fate

keyboard

warning
experts advise that using
may cause serious injury
while turning over and shaking out contrapuntal crumbs
a scattering of unplayed scales
falls from my eyes and fingertips

white out

rubs out the road to there from here
in an icy blast of shrouded blindness
equidistant
pointed to pointless point of no return
we listen to the static noise
erasing everything i meant that you would never say

staples

hold documented scars together
never dissolving or resolving
punctures wounding
both the paper and the skin
thoughtless perishables behind closed doors
fill my emptiness of self

screen

reflects my distorted
fingerprinted face
viral truth and lies
lies as thick as the dust on my illusions and your collusions
first the shield
then the reveal

cords

entangling and untangling
electrical and umbilical
i wear the frayed fabric
faded ridges worn down by the misgivings of forgiving
you chop and bind the rotten wood
and wither the blossom's bud

pen

cages the page
confining lines
between the gates of prologue and epilogue
wielding this instrument of might or might not
treastise broken
indelible ink blots the pain on my escutcheon

trash

overflows with used tissue kisses
world stained with acrid acid tears
plastic oceans and emotions
sweet rot begot and forgot
i watch your ashes drift away
on burning waves of truest blue forget-me-nots



Monday, July 20, 2015

Gems Anthology, July 2014

frozen grasses
the sound of winter
beneath our feet


night drive . . .
a deer leaps over
the moon


summer rain . . .
puddles of confetti
beneath the arbour


winter trees
hold the opal moon
in their arms


moon garden . . .
the night blooms
with scent


sun and moon . . .
the rise and fall
of your breath


dusk
oak leaf lanterns
light my way


laundry day
the weather girl
sorts clouds


writing haiku
words and lines
play leapfrog


twilit lake
the trees and I
reflect


wild horses
these deep fears
unbridled


hummingbird . . .
father hovers over
his garden


spring cleaning . . .
I sweep lies under
the rug


drifting silently
down the line
a pilgrimage into myself
no chains binding my heart
no sorrow prophets
reading my tea leaves

Sunday, July 19, 2015

The Bamboo Hut Press, 2014

Haiku, Senryu, Micropoetry, Tanshi and Sedoka:


harvest moon . . .
crisp apples and wedges
of geese


night drive . . .
a deer leaps over
the moon


frozen grasses
the sound of winter
beneath our feet


at solstice
we share a glass
of sunlight


groundhog day
scattered flurries
of snowdrops


diving into sky
pearl fishers
and cormorants


blue moon . . .
wingprints on snow
and a tuft of fur


summer rain . . .
puddles of confetti
beneath the arbour


sundown
the wine-drenched sea
fills my cup


evensong
a choir of crickets
and wind


frozen reeds
the north wind plays
winter's flute


winter trees
hold the opal moon
in their arms


eclipsed
behind earth's eyelid
bloodshot moon


calypso orchid
on the forest floor
shadow dancing


dusk
oak leaf lanterns
light my way


sun and moon . . .
the rise and fall
of your breath


ice chimes
the thawing lake
exhales


blossoms
of mock orange
peel open summer


coyotes wail
the old dog twitches
at my feet


moon garden . . .
the night blooms
with scent


lady slippers . . .
the way she dances
in her garden


writing haiku
words and lines
play leapfrog


listening deeply
to the poetry of water
i become a wave


twilit lake
the trees and I
reflect


ice wine
the fermenting
of memories


Christmas lights . . .
the shrivelled ghosts
of spiders past


wild horses
these deep fears
unbridled


mortar and pestle
grinding my teeth
into bonedust


spring cleaning . . .
I sweep lies under
the rug


icicle . . .
the melted taste
of you


the new year
counting calories
instead of stars


frost warning . . .
I add covers
to the rose bed


hummingbird . . .
father hovers over
his garden


another year
another pound
of flesh


open window . . .
my nocturne tickles
the ivory moon


woodpecker . . .
he taps long red nails
on the bar


polishing
my glass poems
until I see


a dragonfly
sips from my cup
I fly away


biting wind . . .
even the sun dogs
stay inside


laundry day
the weather girl
sorts clouds


drifting silently
down the line
a pilgrimage into myself
no chains binding my heart
no sorrow prophets
reading my tea leaves