Hometown Haiku

Southeast Elementary School, Grade 5, 1962-1963, Marshall Missouri

My dear old classmates,
so very innocent, and,
so very human.

Automobile Haiku

The poet as a young race car driver

From an early age
I was taught that modern truth:
The car makes the man.

Love Haiku

Young couple in love

What was it really
that overcame your heart’s fear
when you fell for me?

Love Haiku

Odd couple

Your grandmother said,
“You want to find a good man?
Go to church, honey.”

Love Haiku

Waking at midnight

Waking at midnight …
tender words and embraces …
drifting off assured.

Love Haiku

First flush of love

That first flush of love
when all your longing and hope
find their focal point.

Love Haiku

Woman and cat

May it never be!
That I fail to remember
the gift of your love.

Love Haiku

Sunset over Liberty Bay

I may be away,
but my thoughts lie down with you,
my beloved one.

Theological Haiku

Bob Ross taught painting on television for years and years.

A curious thought —
what if God were like Bob Ross,
painting happy trees?

Rustic Free Verse

My brother Larry at about the time of the events in this poem. I'm the little one.
Brother Larry and I at the time of the events in this poem.

 

Wild Geese

I heard them long before I saw them
Like a cacophony of oncoming clown cars.
Rising up out of the valley
And breaking over the Douglas firs.
The biggest formation I’d ever seen,
A magnificent wedge of geese all headed somewhere fast.
There must have been a hundred of them
Flying so low they went by just-like-that
With two hundred wings pumping urgently in unison.
And then they were gone
With just a fading honking echo left behind.

Was it a flock like that, dear brother,
That enticed you to run out of the barn door
That evening so long ago, shotgun in hand,
Thinking you might have a chance at bagging one?

Mom and I were up at the house making cookies,
And I remember hearing eerie wails and noises
Coming from the dark outside
And laughing, thinking it must be some strange animal
Making its strange animal sounds.

But when the cries went on and on
Mom got worried and went to look.
It could have been worse, you know.
You could have blown your head off,
You big klutz.
As it was, you only tripped over the threshold
And broke your elbow, which was bad enough,
So bad you couldn’t wrangle open the barnyard gate,
And so bad it made you moan like a dying beast.

But we drove you all the way to Cameron that night
To find a doctor who could set the bone.
And you got a cast and it healed up mostly,
And though you’d live another 60 years or so,
You never would be able to straighten out that arm.

You did your best to teach me how to hunt
But I never was much for killing things,
Yet … any time I hear wild geese approaching
I still run to where I can get a clear line of sight,
If only to shoot them with my eyes.

Brother John in hunting mode
All my brothers were big hunters.