FROM A HAIKU
JOURNAL
Louisiana
Louisiana:
Rice, cotton; dark, still
bayous:
Vulnerable
land.
Mardi Gras at
dawn
On St. Charles
Avenue:
Ladders await
Rex.
Lakefront
restaurant,
Newspaper on the
table:
Peeling
crawfish.
Hurricane
warning,
The Archbishop offers
prayer:
Long night in a
shelter.
Where our girls grew
up.
Left part of myself down
there,
That haunted
country.
Sports
Page
At Briggs
Stadium,
Older white guys in felt
hats:
Tigers baseball
game.
A clandestine
game:
Blacks and whites on the same
court:
Nineteen
forty-four.
NCAA hoops:
Our sentimental
impulse:
Pull for the lower
seed.
Two ranked lacrosse
teams:
Northern boys come south to
play:
Duke wins in
OT.
Aging
Searched the
Internet,
As people our age will
do:
Old colleague, since
died.
Bought a polo
shirt
At the estate sale;
sadly,
Knew the
provenance.
One day someone
else
Will come to Golden Pines
who
Plays the
dulcimer.
Robert Demaree is the author of three
book-length collections, including After
Labor Day (2014) published by Beech River Books. He presents poetry
readings, seminars and workshops in North Carolina (October through June) and
New England (June through October). Next programs: Twin Lakes Poetry Festival,
Burlington, N.C., May 4 and 11; Effingham Library Poetry Seminar, Effingham,
N.H., June 25. The Haiku Journal is a project to write one haiku or senyru each
day for a year.
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