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Sacred Universe

by Maury Grimm

Sacred Universe. It must be the light of this near full moon that tricks my eyes into seeing every star, planet moving. Or maybe it is the eyes aging as they will, as they are.

The morning light floods slowly along the edge of the Sangres, red and orange like those mountains. Perhaps a reflection of the singular lenticular clouds that drift along the scree. And I, up at 3am and again in this past hour, waiting by the northeastern windows for a light to trail across this morning sky.

For me, this is really the beginning of the new season of years, upon tonight's full moon.

The prayer resounds fuller now into my 61st year, knowing all these evolutions--if I allow--bring me closer to myself.

And that is the prayer, to be. To be the whole and best, to work at my connections, my passion, my family and friends. Not behind the veneer one endures to sometimes 'grow up'. No, I want to grow out and in. Simultaneously out, in, around and continue to spiral to myself, to the Universe.

For in the light, before the cacophony of news, of day, of traveling, we are as old and as young in it. In one breath exhaled, inhaled.

The Haiku


twilight—like clattering
bones, dry branches of winter
hint of pinecones
        -- Kelley J. White
 
  
bamboo reed---
          yellow finches
   taking what they need
        -- Carl Mayfield
 

late October
in the bend of the river
one red tree
        -- JS Absher
 

sunflower husks --
the sharp cry
of a kestrel
        -- Theresa A. Cancro


summer day
crows fight over spilled popcorn
convenient store parking lot
        -- James Babbs


soon enough
this path too
blocked with thorns
`        -- Kelley J. White


brush fire on the mountain
sunset lasts until dawn-
hot dry autumn
        -- Nancy Scott McBride


low sunset –
a red fox skims
the grass
        --Theresa A. Cancro


late March
clothesline sagging with
melting snow
        -- Kelley J. White


broken boards
and torn fish nets -
incoming tide
        -- Joanna M. Weston


Algerian fox
yapping under blood moon
golden dunes
-- Laughing Waters


red-tailed hawk
     circling overhead--
the songbirds shut up
        -- Carl Mayfield


stagnant pond
the back and forth
of a cabbage white
  --Deborah P Kolodji


a drop of rain
strikes a burning rose
petals wither
        -- Robert Beveridge


red chokeberry bush--
the titmouse and
the blue jay take turns
        -- Robin Smith
 

Foraging at dusk
Coyotes howling
Last call of Autumn
        -- Maria DePaul
 

norway maple
where a few leaves just were
the north star
      -- William Cullen, Jr.


Planned community.
Ears up. Eyes wide. Whitetail deer.
C.V.S. ahead
        -- Judith Ann Muse Robinson


bamboo grove
the soft whistle
of a spice finch
        -- Hemapriya Chellappan


billiard toast flock
cask sneaker
tambourine peak hunt
        -- Susan N Aassahde


Chilly night
Redwood tree absorbs
all the moon
        -- Padmini Krishnan


rice grains heavy
against sky blue
red dragonflies
        --Christina Chin


a monkey's hiss
that is not there . . .
dusk in bamboo
        --Veronika Zora Novak


late December
shivering spirits
of the cornfields
        --Roberta Beach Jacobson


three evergreen triangles
slowly climb
a steep hillside
        -- Stephen A. Rozwenc


how are you doing
I asked the turtle
but he was dead
        -- Roberta Beach Jacobson


bees fall from blossoms
yellow swallowtail on asphalt
sick skin, the rivers
        -- Laurie Wilcox-Meyer


frog stiletto dustbin
radio pyre
strawberry fee curfew
        -- Susan N Aassahde


at the dawn some ants
are swimming in the noble dew
but owl needs water
        -- PaweÅ‚ Markiewicz


scorpion haze knees
trapeze dash
pears mountain sand
        --Susan N Aassahde


3 a.m.
cherry blossoms hung heavy
with snow 
       -- Veronika Zora Novak


evening crows gather
at Silver Creek waters
peering at rainbow trout 
        -- Doug Lanzo


Belted Kingfisher
perched high above the lake
preens blue-feathered crown
        -- Doug Lanzo


single bloom
winter garden
the pearl moon
        -- Luther Allen


winter sun
blue notes in a minor key
fresh snow
        -- John Hawkhead


Winter mist
chisels crevices
into Mount Shuksan
        -- Saharsh Sateesh


Magnolia warbler
calling loud & bright
through white ash & hickory
        --Catherine Saccone


two goldfinches alight
on a blush rose bush
across from the Wawa
        -- Mark Danowsky


lightning storm
wearing black better
than night
        -- Rp verlaine


Drizzle aftermath
How different they smell
young leaves and the dried ones
-- Padmini Krishnan

What Basho Knows

by Ron. Lavalette

fog is good
but god’s a frog
loves the sun
—leaps—

Salute to a New Day’s Dawn

by Tom Sheehan

Out of the edge of earth, out of choice darkness mixed with silt and angry acids that form of fire, out of secret caverns rocking in the deep, out of stone moving liquefied which is but a sea we float on, out of distance, out of death-wracking night, out of fear of child-hood, out of nightmares and terror shrieks, out of our ignorance, out of shame of thoughts sitting like pebbles on the soul, dark black pebbles, out of the songs of frenzied air, out of the mouths of monster birds cast from an angry god's hands, freed from moon at endless wait, escaping debtor's prison partly in rags and partly in pain, heaved upwards like a mason's block to the next tier of gray waiting, on the hilltop comes the sun at its widest broadcast. 

Before it, pell-mell fleeing, scudding down alleyways, across corners, stoops, half granite walls where houses used to be, through windows and mirrors and the wiliest of laces where night collects itself in a host of aromas, the shadows go quickly before seven miracles hunting them down, at chase, at wild pursuit, leaping one wall to the next, one huge lunge across barriers, time, as if breath will expire too quickly again, the tightest lungs thrown into athletic surprises.

At Earth edge worms shudder, recoil, go gelatin. Earth shakes with a robin's sprint across a tympanic lawn, as if drummers' batons beat on. He spears the tubed, eyeless thing, soft telescopic escapee just now plowing into loam. The warning signs are warm where wonder makes its way across all the universe.

In the morning mountains, a sundae piled high with sweet textures, explode. I catch the mouthy shrapnel they throw into the battle dawn wages. It is one rare beauty on the fly, beams and sunshine flares and streams and colossal stripes of golden air coming through clouds hanging loose as line-hung blankets. Far out mountains are the first to get this sun, heaving upward whiter cones of snow as brilliant as stars, as sure and as steady as old men who know all the answers and give off such illumination in the phantom measure some gods themselves allow. 

But you there, at the crossroads of this day, looking across the inviolate stretch of gray light we suddenly find between us yet joining us, must also find ignition as spectacle born in the rigors of yesterday's soul. You, too, know the upshot of this new coming, the bird, the fire, the breath deeper than stone. You, also, must linger where the sun warms first, the first warm spot of the day, the bay window broad as an ax sweep, a piece of porch tilted under a pine, a front door stoop as white as first thoughts, a path between corrupt oaks and sleek birches, a blanket where your hand falls to rest,  odd place in your eyes sudden starts have earned when you think all about your being is still dark and the nightmare is the bark of wild dogs crawling down the banners of your mind, spiders of light on the move.

When it all goes down, when the bet is paid off and all markers set straight, our sun comes with singular entry, warm shot, two fingers of life into the glass, just as every alley and each dark space we know wait out the mercies found in light.