Succor for Soul Ninette

succulents in a pot

 

Still
Garden
Succulents,
Thick and fleshy,
Summer heart pulsing,
Pride of Wood Elves,
Flowers not,
Dry Wit,
Root.

Note: This poem is a Ninette, with 5 lines, starting with one syllable on the first line, increasing by ones to five on the fifth and then decreasing by ones to one syllable on the last line. Or a syllable count of: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.

Reference: Poetry Soup – Ninette

Violet Starburst

  “It’s not about what it is, it’s about what it can become.” 

― Dr. Seuss, The Lorax

Giant Allium

shooting stars
tiny truffula trees
violet galaxy

Giant Allium

Note: In my house, despite knowing this is the giant allium bloom, we always call it the Dr. Seuss plant, in honor of it looking like his truffula trees in the Lorax. Every year it delights us and makes us smile.

Wisteria Heavy

Wisteria on a wooden fence

weighted with words
wisteria heavy
falling from lips

Copyright 2014 Brenda Davis Harsham

Dandelion Wishes

IMG_8306

windy days blowing
dandelion kisses high
children make wishes

Dandelion seeding

Copyright 2014 Brenda Davis Harsham

Spring Bonnets

Lacy Cap Mushroom

lacy-capped mushrooms
popping up all over town
spring bonnets

Copyright 2014 Brenda Davis Harsham

Iris Blooms Haibun

Pink Iris in Bloom

 

The sun is blinding hot today, a taste of summer to come in four weeks. In a previous post, Visitor in the Temple Haibun, I wrote about irises that came in the soil of my house. For years they sent up green leaves, but never did they bloom except once.

Two years ago, I moved them from their spot beside the wild forsythia. An iris grows from a fat root that sits shallowly in the soil. Planted too deep, it will never bloom. Once transported, irises can take years to acclimate and rebloom. But taken care of, the root will outlive us all.

patient, enduring
hibernating deeply
blooming when ready

This morning, those iris roots, probably older than me but certainly older than all my children, have bloomed again. Last winter’s severe cold must have given them a taste for summer’s heat.  Across the street, my neighbor’s irises also greet the sunshine, proudly and without shyness.

elegant beards drape
velvet walkways invites bees
tomorrow’s blooms wait

Note: This post is dedicated to those who persevere, who ride out the hard times, make homes wherever they are transplanted, and then bloom when the moment is right. You know who you are. 🙂

Copyright 2014 Brenda Davis Harsham

Note on photographs: The above picture is of the irises that have finally bloomed for me. These below are those from across the street, neighboring monarchs.

Orange Iris blooming Pink Iris blooming

Fairy Tale Flower

White Tulips

To glow in the cold rain,
When bleak skies are dim,
And never once complain,
You could be written by Grimm.

Copyright 2014 Brenda Davis Harsham

White Tulips

Nature’s Lace

white hydrangea blossoms

grandmother’s table
set with crystal and white lace
nature’s lace echoes

Copyright 2014 Brenda Davis Harsham

Bumblebee, Bumblebee

IMG_8514

Bumblebee, Bumblebee,
What do you see?
Are flowers as big to you as a tree to me?
Are stamens your tightrope?
Is that wet petal like a mountain slope?
Do you dream? What is your hope?
Bumblebee, bumblebee,
I care about you, you see.
Without you, there might be no me.

Copyright 2014 Brenda Davis Harsham

Diamond Rain Tanka

Red Smokebush in Rain

clouds crystalize
raindrops dissolve light into
diamond dewdrops

sunshine is a memory
but cleansing tears renew life

Copyright 2014 Brenda Davis Harsham

Plum Island Haibun

Pavilion Beach, Ipswich, looking out at Plum Island

Seabirds scream overhead before diving into Pavilion Beach’s gentle waves. Tide pools reflect the sky. Surrounding sand is cold and muddy, squashing between my toes. A salty wind scrubs my skin raw.

The Ipswich beach is not crowded, but on one side, a sausage dog sniffs my feet and looks askance. On the other side, college students discuss over-drinking and under-studying, their laughter louder than the waves. Across the Sound, Plum Island’s sands gleam whiter than wishes. I daydream about solitude over there: just my family, the seabirds and the sunshine, sea winds blowing my cares away.

tide ripples and footsteps on the sand

I look down at the ripples left by the tides. Overlaid are footprints of people who arrived, gazed at the same sights as me, and then departed. They left these traces of life behind: bare feet, shod feet, children’s feet, bird feet. I add my footprints to the chaos left by other beach lovers. I am part of a greater whole, separate, yet no different.

white boat bobs
sails furled, engine quiet
bird feet leave no trace

Copyright 2014 Brenda Davis Harsham

Flower Maelstrom

IMG_8212

colorful maelstrom
paradise of May flowers
butterflies welcomed

yellow tulips

azalea and wood hyacinth

 

Copyright 2014 Brenda Davis Harsham