Showing posts with label Haiku. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Haiku. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Oh Forsythia



April 16, 2024


Oh Forsythia!
asteroids tumbling in space
awake in the night.

Saturday, November 21, 2020

We are made to love


November 21

One afternoon in the fall, November 21st, I saw Fair Haven Pond with its island and meadow; between the island and the shore, a strip of perfectly smooth water in the lee of the island; and two hawks sailing over it; and something more I saw which cannot easily be described  February 14, 1851 

Coincidences like this are accompanied by a certain flash as of hazy lightning, flooding all the world suddenly with a tremulous serene light which it is difficult to see long at a time.  November 21, 1850

                      


  1

We are made to love
the pond and meadow as wind
to ripple water.

With its island and
meadow between the island
and the shore and its

strip of perfectly
still and smooth water in the
lee of the island,

I see Fair Haven
and two hawks, fish hawks perhaps,
sailing over it.

I do not see how
it could be improved or yet
what these things can be.

I begin to see
such an object when I cease
to understand it.

These forms and colors
so adapted to my eye,
meadow and island.

What are these things?
The hawks and ducks so aloof --
Nature so reserved.



2

I see Fair Haven Pond
with its island and meadow
between the island

and the shore and a
strip of perfectly still and
smooth water in the

lee of the island
and two hawks, fish hawks perhaps,
sailing over it.

I do not see how
it could be improved or yet
what these things can be.

I begin to see
such an object when I
cease to understand it.

and I see that I
did not appreciate or
realize it before --

how adapted these
forms and colors to my eye!
meadow and island!

Nature so reserved!
the hawks and ducks so aloof!
What are these things? 

I get no further than this
.
We are made to love
pond and meadow as the wind
to ripple water.


See also
  • February 14, 1851 ("We shall see but little way if we require to understand what we see.")
  • July 16, 1851(" To have such sweet impressions made on us, such ecstasies begotten of the breezes!  . . .There comes into my mind such an indescribable, infinite, all-absorbing, divine, heavenly pleasure, a sense of elevation and expansion, and [I] have had nought to do with it. I perceive that I am dealt with by superior powers. This is a pleasure, a joy, an existence which I have not procured myself.”)
  • January 26, 1852 ("Let us preserve, secure, protect the coincidence of our life with the life of nature.")
  • April 18, 1852 (""Why should just these sights and sounds accompany our life?")
  • August 3, 1852 (" By some fortunate coincidence of thought or circumstance I am attuned to the universe, I am fitted to hear, my being moves in a sphere of melody, my fancy and imagination are excited to an inconceivable degree.")
  • August 23, 1852 ("What are these rivers and hills, these hieroglyphics?")
  • August 23, 1852 ("I look out at my eyes, I come to my window, and I feel and breathe the fresh air. It is a fact equally glorious with the most inward experience.")
  • June 5, 1853 ("The heavens and the earth are one flower. The earth is the calyx, the heavens the corolla")
  • Walden ("Nature is as well adapted to our weakness as to our strength.")
  • September 4, 1854 ("Nature is stung by God and the seed of man planted in her.")
  • September 9, 1854 ("Thus the earth is the mother of all creatures.")
  • January 12, 1855 (" It is not merely crow calling to crow, for it speaks to me too. I am part of one great creature with him; if he has voice, I have ears. I can hear when he calls. Ah, bless the Lord, O my soul! bless him for wildness, for crows that will not alight within gunshot! and bless him for hens, too, that croak and cackle in the yard! ")
  • December 11, 1855 ("I am struck by the perfect confidence and success of nature")
  • December 5, 1856 ("I have never got over my surprise that I should have been born into the most estimable place in all the world, and in the very nick of time, too")
  • November 22, 1860 ("Still nature is genial to man. Still he beholds the same inaccessible beauty around him. Simply to see to a distant horizon through a clear air, - the fine outline of a distant hill or a blue mountain- top through some new vista, - this is wealth enough for one afternoon.")


A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau
 "A book, each page written in its own season, 
out-of-doors, in its own locality."
 ~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx ©  2009-2025

https://tinyurl.com/hdt-madetolovve

Sunday, May 19, 2019

A Book of the Seasons: May


I see that I could assign some office to each day which, 
summed up, would be the history of the year.  
Henry Thoreau , August 24, 1852.




We have poetry
— flowers and the song of birds --
before woods leaf out.
May 1, 1852


One frog begins then
the whole pond joins in until
all stop together.


Little peeping frogs
make a sound you do not hear
unless you attend.


The bright blue river,
the fresh yellow green meadow,
the green river grass.


The peculiarly
beautiful, clean and tender
green of the grass there.
May 5, 1853


The willows are now
suddenly a tender fresh
light yellowish-green.
May 6, 1852
Now before the leaves,
little wood warblers begin
to people the trees


Immortal water
strange to us forever,
sparkling with life.


Sitting by the shore
this still cloudy thoughtful day
counting frog noses.


Shad-bush in blossom,
seen afar amid gray twigs,
before its own leaves.


Young fresh-expanding
oak leaves form a leafy mist
throughout the forest.
May 11, 1859


The sugar maple
blossoms on the commons
resound with bees.
May 12, 1860


The expanding leaves
now beautiful in the rain
covered with clear drops.
May 13, 1852


The willow blossoms
fill the air with a sweet scent
Ah! willow willow!
Deciduous trees
are now a mist of leaflets
against the dark pines.


So clear bright and fresh
the whole earth is one flower,
genial to man.


How bright the new world,
how fresh and full of promise
after the May storm.
May 17 1852


Sunny yellow-green
light and life in the landscape.
This beautiful world.
Shadows sweep over
the waving meadow grasses.
Bright fair weather clouds.
May 19, 1860


Now is the time for
bright and breezy days blowing
off apple blossoms.
May 20, 1854


Their leaves like flowers,
the birches by the railroad
flash yellow on me.
May 21, 1860


The springing foliage
lighting up the landscape like
sunlight on the woods.


Pee-a-wee, Pee-oo.
In the woods behind the spring
a wood pewee sings.


The morning comes in
and awakens me early.
A window open.


Loud very rich song,
black head, rose breast, white beneath:
Rose-breasted Grosbeak.




This luxuriant growth 
vibrating motion and light,
seasons' rapid whirl.

I hold a wood frog
the color of a dead leaf,
perfectly frog-like.



Like a true minstrel 
the wood thrush sings steadily,
loud and clear and sweet.
May 28, 1855.



The white maple keys
fall and float down the stream like
wings of great insects.


Strong lights and shades now.
It is a day of shadows,
the leaves have so grown.


The voice of the toad
first heard a month ago sounds
differently now.


A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau
"A book, each page written in its own season, 
out-of-doors, in its own locality."
~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx ©  2009-2019

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