MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Here's this week's heap of haikus:
tanka haiku:
All one ever knows,
Is what they’ve experienced,
Or taken on faith.
But, like silt in riverbeds,
Both can muddy the waters.
---
They think they've won, but ...
like the phoenix from ashes,
I shall rise again!
---
There’s a twilight time
between dusk and eve’ning that
nurtures reflection.
---
walking through the woods,
I find a weathered birdhouse,
nailed onto a tree.
---
the arc of each life,
pierces many hearts, which sews
tapestries of hope.
---
He says he will learn,
through obtuse introspection …
(This may take a while.)
---
Whispering biddies,
Sitting in their parlour chairs,
Can, sometimes be right.
---
Waltzing through life is
not as easy as it sounds …
There’s all that counting!
---
Whispering your name,
in my darkest moments, gives
me soothing solace.
---
A muse in a mews
may muse on what an awl weighs,
in all ways, always.
---
haiku quartet:
Another shooting.
Still more lives lost, more wounded.
Still too many guns.
Too many shooters
that should never own a gun,
can still get a gun.
Stop protecting the
guilty by hiding them 'midst
all the innocent.
Americans own
way too many guns, (It's true!)
Way too many guns.
---
Weekends never end,
The beer's free and sex sublime ...
I know, in my dreams.
---
James Joyce had no choice,
baby wanders Nighttown and
cries, "Haiku-chee-ku."
---
On the bus ride home,
he reached into his pocket,
and found her love note.
---
Fine fettles of fish,
fancily filleted, feed five ...
flounders feast filling.
---
The worker began
rummaging through his tool-box,
looking for pliers.
---
blue serge suits haven’t
gotten better. The truth is,
they’ve gotten worsted.
---
Shuttered cottages.
Settled dust on empty chairs.
Light peeks through windows.
---
Chatting with strangers,
finding commonalities,
makes the world seem small.
---
An angel’s blessing,
cleanses souls and awakens
hearts to receive love.
---
Anguish and remorse
when embraced by solitude,
will shed bitter tears.
---
Waiting for the dawn,
I lie in somber darkness,
replaying the past.
---
To friends, be loyal,
to enemies, forgiving …
Siblings? Persevere.
---
She was of good faith
and she did all the right things,
still, she felt empty.
---
in his cubbyhole,
a writer pecks his keyboard …
inspiration strikes!
---
In a second mug,
he pours himself three fingers,
of ten year old scotch.
---
Open up your mind,
free your thoughts from tyranny.
let your dreams escape.
---
tanka haiku:
How do the living
deal with the dying, and not
get stuck in their realm?
It’s difficult, as we must
tread lightly ’round Life’s edges.
---
Whispering bridesmaids,
gossip ’bout the men at the
bachelor party.
---
Two little dogs rush
onto the elevator ….
then, ... the door closes!
---
If you want the world
to be your oyster, it helps
to know how to shuck.
---
Waiting by the door,
a shy young girl fidgets with
her yellow wrist-band.
---
On a cloudy day
with intermittent rain, a
laugh may still break through.
---
Any given day,
swirling leaves will seem confused
by the winds of change.
---
double haiku:
He sees kids at play
and represses sadness at
not having children.
Sitting in the park,
he looks at ducks and swallows,
wishing he could fly.
---
A yellow balloon
dances in a cloud-less sky
and we’re all children.
---
Fridays, after work,
She really lets her hair down,
And dances till dawn.
---
tanka haiku:
Those that can not deal
with their friend’s adversities,
fear their own weakness.
But smooth sailing weakens sailors
while stormy weather breeds strength.
---
When all around you
things are erupting, it helps
to take a long view.
(This week in 79AD ... Vesuvius erupted.)
Painting: "Herculanum, August 23, year 79" by Hector Leroux (1881)
---
The Woman in Gold ...
Those that admire, sometimes
conspire ... ( 'Nuff said!' )
Painting: "The Woman in Gold" - Gustav Klimt.
---
---
---
tanka haiku:
My dog, Christopher,
a beagle of character,
Came when I was 5
and left when I was 20.
We shared lots of adventures.
* This week included National Dog Day. Christopher was an older beagle around the time this photo was taken. We got him as a puppy in 1955 and he lived until 1970. We were told his name was Goldie, but my sister and I decided to name him after St. Christopher. It turned out he was a pure-breed, so my dad, on a lark in 1955, went down to the AKC to register him. The American Kennel Club wouldn't take his name as Christopher, however, because they thought it was too plain and easily confused with other dogs, so my dad registered him officially as "Happy Herman of Lostbrook", Lostbrook Road being the street in West Hartford that we lived on at the time. Christopher was given to us by my mother's godfather, who was an advertising executive in NYC for many years. He drove up from Florida with Christopher in the back seat of his Buick. "Uncle Ed" knew Sherman Billingsley, who owned the Stork Club, and the story goes that Christopher was one of the puppies from a litter from one of Mr. Billingsley's beagles. The story also goes that Christopher was traumatized by someone in uniform when, as a puppy, he flew on an airplane. That is supposedly why he barked at anyone in uniform; the mailman, the milk man or even my father's brother, Brad, who was an Army Officer. ... but never mind that. In the early years, we kept a box in the garage, as Christopher enjoyed roaming the neighborhood and returning with items swiped from the kids on the block like doll's heads and rubber balls, etc. He also liked to eat pies that were cooling on window ledges. Other than that, he was a very good dog. When Christopher's body began to fail, it came at the same time my father was fighting a losing battle with cancer. It was only a few months before he himself died that my dad had to take Christopher to the vet and have him put down. I was away at college at the time, so I could only imagine how tough that must have been for my dad. The house in this photo was the one that was cut into the side of a hill, and my dad built a kind of overhead zip line for Christopher. so he could get some exercise, but not run wild through the neighborhood. I don't know if you can see it in the photo or not, but he was tied to it when this photo was taken.
****
Comments
a day in August
the heat was never-ending
Mom made lemonade
by Oxy Mora on Fri, 08/28/2015 - 11:51pm
Good one, Oxy!!
Mom made lemonade
Dad worked on the truck, and I
held the monkey wrench.
When we took a break
we listened to the ballgame,
Mom made sandwiches.
by MrSmith1 on Sat, 08/29/2015 - 12:28am
Thank you for the lovely haikus.
by trkingmomoe on Sat, 08/29/2015 - 5:58pm
Thanks, trking!
Behind a closed door,
underneath the sheets, we try
to come together.
by MrSmith1 on Sat, 08/29/2015 - 6:39pm
I pinned my hair up,
looked at myself in the glass
and wondered what else.
Were my cheeks too pale?
My lips too thin and pasty?
Fearful eyes gazed back.
The brush in my hand,
I hesitated to choose
between me and him ...
by barefooted on Mon, 08/31/2015 - 1:23am
Excellent haiku triplet, Missy!
(Here's an unsolicited last line alternative that might also work; 'See him or stay home?' )
The sober mirror
flaunts my discrepancies and
glues them in my brain.
.
by MrSmith1 on Mon, 08/31/2015 - 12:37pm
I was trying to express a woman attempting to transform herself for a man via a mirror, and feeling totally out-of-self. Though I like your substitution, it's doesn't convey my point.
PS - try to be understanding of Peracles ... a pencil to the testicles likely affects a guy.
by barefooted on Mon, 08/31/2015 - 10:59pm
Is autotrepanation.
The balls? Just piercing.
Wouldn't change his stance
On romance? She gave him a
Piercing lance. I do.
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 08/31/2015 - 11:49pm
I do? So do I.
Refusing to change stances
diffuses the lance.
by barefooted on Tue, 09/01/2015 - 1:34am
Yes, I totally got what you were trying to say. You said it perfectly. Forgive me for trying to tweak your vision.
When a pencil's shoved
in your testicles, you'll yell,
"TICONDEROGA!!"
by MrSmith1 on Tue, 09/01/2015 - 12:08am
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 08/31/2015 - 4:56am
Okay ... First, it's the Flying Wallendas or the Flying Karamazov Brothers. pick one.
Second, this is the haiku section you've wandered into. These 'poems' are not haiku.
Third, I think you can do a lot better than this.
Thanks.
by MrSmith1 on Mon, 08/31/2015 - 12:53pm
The Pharisees crowed
Bout the stories I'd foretold
I guess they weren't sold :-(
The kids next door stoled
The stuff I'd been holding for
You. So don't complain.
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 08/31/2015 - 1:19pm
So, hit the deck, Lech!
I'm not being ruff on you
I'm being patient.
Your precious time's not
worth the luminous dial
that it's painted on.
But never mind that ...
The purpose of all this is
to make smiles, not sneers.
.
by MrSmith1 on Mon, 08/31/2015 - 1:49pm
Sniggers, not chiggers.
Guess after all it figgers
I made up tiggers.
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 08/31/2015 - 3:04pm
Pooh on your figger,
Milne made up Tigger, AND that
honey pot digger.
by MrSmith1 on Mon, 08/31/2015 - 4:47pm
Why did you have to ignore
His contributions? Sulk.
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 08/31/2015 - 11:58pm
Eeyore has a tail
to nail and a tale to tell,
Piglet rings Pooh's bell.
by MrSmith1 on Tue, 09/01/2015 - 12:13am
Nail has 2 beats: nay-uhl.
Tails get beat oft.
by PeraclesPlease on Tue, 09/01/2015 - 12:20am
Talking with strangers
seeing I did not get it
let me know my size.
by moat on Thu, 09/03/2015 - 6:34pm
Let me know my size,
but please keep in mind that I'm
constantly stretching.
by barefooted on Thu, 09/03/2015 - 7:48pm
We must stay away from strangers, and no one is stranger than me. hahahahah
I am waiting for tomorrow. I am hand writing these days. Better that.
I don't even know why i react to this. hahahahah
Oh yeah, he was talking about strangers.
I got grandkids. Keep them away from strangers.
by Richard Day on Thu, 09/03/2015 - 7:53pm
What's up tomorrow?
I hand-write things all the time,
but then can't read them!
by barefooted on Thu, 09/03/2015 - 8:15pm
I PRINT MISSY.
It is easier that way. hahahahah
by Richard Day on Thu, 09/03/2015 - 8:32pm
Why do you print me?
It would seem easier to
use the alphabet! ;-)
by barefooted on Thu, 09/03/2015 - 8:42pm
Serial writers
might find it easier to
use the Alpha-Bits.
by MrSmith1 on Thu, 09/03/2015 - 10:12pm
The best bits are the
Last bites, the last word is the
Most absurd. Da-da?
by PeraclesPlease on Fri, 09/04/2015 - 1:55am
The prince cast a spell.
The prints last a spell, due to
New copy writes, amirite?
by PeraclesPlease on Fri, 09/04/2015 - 1:53am
I dunno, the flow
that makes me glow's far beyond
the status quo (wink).
by barefooted on Fri, 09/04/2015 - 2:16am
Twinkle twinkle lit-
tle asterisk, how I won-
der how 2 answer (*this)
by PeraclesPlease on Fri, 09/04/2015 - 8:07am