In early dimness,
a quiet, unmoving sky
chills, waiting for dusk.
Tag Archives: poetry
Luna
A simple poem about the moon.
I wrote this during a class on poetry that I was teaching for Cat Rambo’s excellent writing academy. (There’s a ton of classes available there–if it’s the kind of thing you do, you should check them out.)
I think the writing exercise was something like, “You can find poetry where you look for it.” The night before, the moon had been a heavy, looming harvest orange.
I’ve always liked traditional stories that depict the moon as a lonely woman. I wonder if that was in the back of my head.

Haiku for January 27th
The cats cuddle close
wanting the warmth of my skin
offering their fur.
Haiku for January 20th
Waiting in the cold,
trying not to let my mind
rush when all is calm.
Haiku for January 13th
Winter-whitened sun
makes a cold, pretty morning–
gentle, short-lived light.
Haiku for January 6th
Bitter, windy, dark,
clattering cold strikes the rain,
sharp, overwhelming.
Haiku for December 16th
The sky is no clock.
My body wants to obey
its demand for sleep.

Haiku for December 9th
The dark comes sooner.
Night will creep even further.
I wane with the day.

Haiku for December 2nd
Still light at waking
but pale; sun’s cheek tilts away;
we don’t face ourselves.

Haiku for November 11th
Half-naked branches,
black, with yellow flags waving
gentle in the wind.
