The Bishop and the Butterfly: Murder, Politics, and the End of the Jazz Age
    MrSmith1's picture

    More haikus for the Friday before Christmas Eve

    This week's batch:

     

    haiku: When you're 61
    and your mom is 93,
    You find pics like this.

    (My mom with Santa circa 1926)

     

    Hiding on the stairs,
    they watched in awe (and glee) as
    Santa ate cookies.

     

    ----------------------------------

     

    triple haiku: When you look forward
    to spending time with fam'ly,
    it must be Christmas.

    Okay, just kidding ...
    but aren't relatives more fun
    when they give you gifts?

    Okay, still kidding ...
    I guess I just want to say ...
    Merry Christmas, friends.

     

    ----------------------------------

     

    He trudged through the snow,
    to get back home while it was
    still Christmas morning.
     
     
     
    He had come to grips
    with his own mortality,
    till he found true love.
     
     
     
    What's that you're hiding?
    Under your coat, what is that?
    My Christmas present?!
     
     
     
    Walnuts and filberts,
    each Christmas forced to listen
    to "The Nutcracker."
     
     
     
     
    A shy spry guy tries
    to rise, spies a prize and cries,
    'Those pies? My demise!'


     

    I love old photos.
    Those moments frozen in time
    help
    me remember.



     

    delicate imbalance;
    visually int'resting
    just don't tip over.
     
     
     
    at the museum,
    each painting struck a chord, which
    formed a symphony.
     
     
     
     
    One day, he just left.
    No-one knew where he went, so ...
    they assumed Cleveland.
     
     
     
     
    The winter solstice;
    the shortest day of the year ...
    and the longest night.

    (and a tip of the hat to Lorenz Hart for this one.)
     
     
     
     
    She remembers how
    he used to make her laugh, but
    she can't recall why.
     
     
     
     
    an anguished young soul
    looked to her older siblings
    but they turned away.

     

     

    ---------------------------------
     

    He would often stroll
    through the streets of his hometown
    searching for his past.

     

    Respondku by a friend :

    Just his initials
    drawn in wet concrete, now dry,
    prove he once was there.



    Old fields now paved, he
    gazes where he once roamed, but
    flowers bloom no more.



    Respondku:

    He smiles some at the
    memories of the flowers;
    tears up a bit, too.



    Quietly, his tears
    start to flow, his brain flooded
    with dear memories.


    Passersby comment,
    asking if he is alright.
    he nods, but can't speak.



    When younger, he'd cry
    at flowers, too, but he'd say,
    "It's just allergies."


    Now, he knows the truth:
    it's not allergies at all.
    Beauty makes him cry.



    the moral of this?
    don't let haiku writers near
    juxtapositions.



    -------------------------------

     

     
    Some folks felt that he
    squandered opportunities,
    but they lacked vision.

     

    His thoughts were seldom
    focused on the here and now,
    rather what could be.

     

    -----------------------------------

     

     

    When his old dog died,
    There was no reason for him
    to keep the chew toys.

     

     

    Miracles occur
    ev'ry day, but here's the catch,
    you can't count on them.
     
     
     

     

    My English muffin
    dropped on to my kitchen floor
    (The butter side up.)
     

     

     

    Watching the parade,
    chevrons adorning his sleeve,
    an old vet salutes.

     

     

    The boxes contents
    are as unorganized as
    the room they're kept in.

     

     

    Her gold charm bracelet,
    clanged against the banister,
    as she climbed the stairs.

     

     

    Small pleasures offered;
    Words to arouse, amuse and,
    stimulate the mind.




    Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah and Happy Holiday of no-religious significance to all the Dagbloggers.
     

     

     

     

    Comments

    God I recall this song; when it first hit the airways. Remember when we had airways instead of the internet?

    61

    Damn I would never reach 61 let alone 64. hahahaha

    Looks like I shall even have a grandchild on my knee prior to 64! And I might even live that long! damn!!!

    The boxes are gone! They took them all away from me.

    Merry Xmas for Chrissakes! ha


    DD, what can I say ... Merry Christmas, damnit!


    A baby is born

    hoping for adoration.

    New life is like that.


    This has nothing to do with nothing but I watch Animal Channel and Discovery and History and here are these Polar Bears and Lions and Cheetahs and what not and they are all dedicated to their foal.

    It is amazing really.

    No 'culture' as such.

    Dad might appear and threaten to eat the lot. hahshhhahahahah

    I was the first born son and thereby worshipped by dad until he drank himself to death.

    Upper NY culture will send their 3 year olds to preschool in order to get an edge.

    Some Indian Kid can find the lottery on some game show.

    The polar bears and the lions and the cheetahs and what not are concerned with the advancement of a species.


     

    Good One, moat!

     

     


    Merry Christmas to you, Mr Smith.

    Thanks trkingmoe!  Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you,