Timestamp

As autumn slowly fades into winter’s relentless grasp, I find myself wandering back through the pages of my mind, watching piles of leaves I raked this morning skitter across the lawn in a gusting late-afternoon wind. The world has turned the color of pumpkins raining from the sky. My mood is festive yet somber; the harvest celebration approaches, but there are not enough fingers and toes on my body to count all the faces missing in this picture. On a quiet hill overlooking my village, I come upon a stand of oaks and wonder why I never climbed them. I pick up an acorn the squirrels left behind, carry it back to the house, and place it on the mantle next to my father’s ashes.

a canopy of clouds
muffles the wolf’s howl
. . . midnight moon

Conflicted

perfect timing . . .
the way you make
my heart throb

perplexed again . . .
why is my love for you
so much like madness?

vision quest . . .
I look into your eyes
for answers

going out?
I could write an epic
with your lilac perfume

romance on the rocks . . .
you hold out your hand
for another sip

fading photograph . . .
how you drift
away

dust in the footprints
on my doorstep . . .
your last visit

your apparition stands
in the doorway, disrobed . . .
now that’s the spirit

the last poem
to my name . . .
dressed in rags for you

First published in Failed Haiku