Crows at an art exhibition, Kings Place, London photograph through window glass by Alan Summers |
a scarecrow’s journey
even the leaves become
butterfly dreams
Publication Credit:
Scope (FAWQ magazine July 2015 vol. 61 no. 6)
wildflowers adding a little evening to the daylight
Publication Credit: Presence #52 (2015)
700,000 olive trees remember the butterfly
Publication Credit:
Bones - journal for contemporary haiku issue 7 July 15th 2015
dandelion fluff
I lose count of my time
on this earth
Publication Credit: Brass Bell July 2015 Showcase
Unforgiving rain I write my next epitaph in a dream
Publication Credit: Asahi Shimbun (Japan, July 31)
we learn to adjust
the clocks of our hands
borrowed moon
Publication Credit:
sequence: Bones - journal for contemporary haiku no. 7 July 15th 2015
cobweb moon
a man’s opening lines
fill with mortar
Publication Credit:
sequence: Bones - journal for contemporary haiku issue 7 July 15th 2015
conjugating verbs
across a battlefield
matins moon
Publication Credit:
sequence: Bones - journal for contemporary haiku issue 7 July 15th 2015
Minnelli's films
the spirits of long lost actors
across a dance floor
Publication Credit: Asahi Shimbun (Japan, August 21st 2015)
the sound dome of bees
how many shades of color
can a human see
Selected by Isamu Hashimoto
Publication Credit: Mainichi Shimbun (Japan, July 7, 2015)
The colour rain
runs through our blood types
in wood and iron
Publication Credit: Asahi Shimbun (Japan, July 2015)
family home
the grain of the wood
enters his hands
Publication Credit:
Prune Juice, Journal of Senryu, Kyoka, Haibun & Haiga, Issue Sixteen: July, 2015
mistfall
the swansongs
of orb spiders
Publication Credit:
Scope (FAWQ magazine July 2015 vol. 61 no. 6)
quickening its rain
through the eye of a needle
the dragonfly’s glint
Publication Credit:
Scope (FAWQ magazine July 2015 vol. 61 no. 6)
stray casuality
my tears reflected
as bandages
Publication Credit:
Ekphrastic haiku for Art Installation by Fairley Barnes and Call for Haiku Response
garden chores
I dig another timezone
from the backyard
Publication Credit: Mainichi Shimbun (Japan, March 31st 2015)
corn moon
the jackdaw shifts
its iris
Publication Credit:
Asahi Shimbun (International Haiku Day April 17th 2015); EarthRise Rolling Haiku Collaboration 2015, The Year of Light
Note:
Pangolin London exhibited a varied selection of works at the Kings Place building that celebrated the skills of modern British and contemporary sculptors.