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Haiku Harvest - ISSN: 1557-7619 (Digital)- Volume 1, Number 1 - Spring 2000

Editor: Denis Michel Garrison

The Vol. 1, No. 1 Spring 2000 Issue [ISSN: 1558-9862 (Print)] is archived in the California State Library's American Haiku Archive.

HAIKU

Elizabeth St Jacques
new year 2000;     cold moon;     bitter night;     bright sunlight

Ferris Gilli
new spider web--;     sunset...;     winter sun;     my diet begins--;     bathroom garden--;    
wind rustling;     flooded creek--;     first morning;     winter pond;     first sun

Maria Steyn
drought's end;     sudden cold;     midnight moon;     between earth and sky;     bushveldt afternoon;    
noonday;     quiet pasture;     evening breeze

Joy Hewitt Mann
from the river bank;     with flower water;     old cemetery;     a bowl of colors;     a cicada calls;    
two blue herons fly

Denis Garrison
setting in hedgerow;     bravely in the breeze;     black flocks of grackles;     wet warm breeze;    
swinging from wing tips;     in low scudding clouds;     last night a deep snow;    
remembering;     at this ancient well

SENRYU

Issara Jones
becoming clear;     Spilt coffee!;     with tiny kisses;     prison yard --

Denis Garrison
gone two years;     first kanji drawn;     peach petal on snow;     dew dampened boots;    
garbagemen have left;     snowy sidewalk

H A I K U

ELIZABETH ST JACQUES

                                            new year 2000
                                            my Christmas cactus
                                            continues to bloom

                           

                                            cold moon
                                            the watchful wolf
                                            glistening with frost

                           

                                            bitter night
                                            breaking the silence,
                                            a pine tree's snap

                           

                                            bright sunlight
                                            down the snowy hill
                                            laughter of children

Copyright © 2000 by Elizabeth St Jacques

About the Poet

Elizabeth St Jacques' reviews, articles, and poetry have been published internationally, included in a number of anthologies and websites. Over the years, she has judged numerous poetry competitions and served as Poetry Editor of Canadian Writer's Journal, Contributing Editor with Small Press Review, and a Book Review Editor with Albatross (Romania). Presently, she serves as Associate Editor of Sijo West. Elizabeth's book reviews have appeared in Canadian Book Review Annual, Canadian Author, Atlantic Books Today, Freelance, Haiku Canada, Frogpond, Albatross, among others. Author of eight books, two of which are award-winners, her poetry has earned numerous awards. Editor of Poetry In The Light, which features Oriental poetry, related essays, articles, and reviews in the English language by world acclaimed poets. (See also Elizabeth's biography at her excellent website.)

Website: Poetry In The Light.

E-Mail: esj@sympatico.ca

FERRIS GILLI

                                            flooded creek --
                                            minnows school
                                            in a heron's nest

                           

                                            new spider web --
                                            a drop of resin
                                            catches sunlight

                           

                                            sunset . . .
                                            water weeds drip
                                            from a stork's beak

                           

                                            winter sun
                                            the hammock's shadow
                                            gets thinner

                           

                                            bathroom garden --
                                            the aralia spider
                                            lurks in a faucet

                           

                                            wind rustling
                                            over the corn shocks . . .
                                            moonrise

                           

                                            first morning
                                            the aloe's bloom stalk
                                            leans against a wall

                           

                                            my diet begins --
                                            again the cat stalks
                                            a cloth mouse

                           

                                            winter pond
                                            a slow wind ruffles
                                            glints of sunlight

                           

                                            first sun
                                            she bathes the bonsai
                                            leaf by leaf

Copyright © 2000 by Ferris Gilli

About the Poet

Ferris Gilli was born and grew up in Georgia. She has lived in Paraguay and Germany and now resides with her husband, Harry, in Orlando, Florida. Ferris has earned a first and a fourth place in the Alabama Sakura Haiku Competition and won third prize in the 1998 Herb Barrett contest. She was among the ten winners of the 2nd Annual International People's Haiku Contest and won Honorable Mention in the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society East-West 99 Hokku Contest, the 1999 Harold G. Henderson Awards, and the NLAPW poetry contest. Ferris's haiku, tanka, haibun, and renku have appeared in Cicada, Modern Haiku, Frogpond, Acorn, Raw Nervz, Haiku Spirit, Presence, Tundra, and Lynx. Her work has been selected to appear in The Art of Haiku 2000; American Haibun & Haiga 1999; The Red Moon Anthology of English-Language Haiku 1999; Snapshots; and the Tanka Hundred anthology. Her poems can be seen online at Poetry in the Light, Reflections, Haiga Online, The Heron's Nest, Chaba, and Pickings. When Ferris is not bird watching, writing haiku, gardening, or visiting with her daughter Susana, she writes mystery novels.

E-Mail: hgilli@cfl.rr.com

MARIA STEYN

                                            sudden cold
                                            dripping from a window
                                            dust-filled raindrops

                           

                                            drought's end
                                            puddles soak the roots
                                            of a dead tree

                           

                                            midnight moon
                                            silent bat wings circle
                                            the garden

                           

                                            between earth and sky
                                            the afterglow where swallows
                                            swoop and glide

                           

                                            bushveldt afternoon
                                            a herd of zebra graze
                                            in light and shade

                           

                                            noonday
                                            a sunflower vibrates
                                            against the hot sky

                           

                                            quiet pasture
                                            a horse munches on
                                            dry grass

                           

                                            evening breeze
                                            through pin oak leaves
                                            a star

Copyright © 2000 by Maria Steyn

About the Poet

Maria Steyn lives in South Africa with her husband, young daughter, two collies, a cat and a variety of wild garden birds. As a student, she had poetry published in the university's literary magazine, won a poetry competition, and became editor of the student magazine for literature. She attained an honours degree in Philosophy and then furthered her studies to become a language teacher. After a few years of teaching in Soweto and various private schools, and some more years raising a small child, she has taken up writing again in 1999. She has a passion for poetry, stories, books, children, nature, the fine arts and music.

E-Mail: chameleo@iafrica.com

JOY HEWITT MANN

                                            old cemetery
                                            wreath hung before the ice storm
                                            brilliant in the sun

                           

                                            from the river bank
                                            the willow tree unbending
                                            this first walk of spring

                           

                                            with flower water
                                            washing his granite stupa
                                            texture of the stone

                           

                                            a bowl of colors
                                            promises enlightenment
                                            Imari china

                           

                                            a cicada calls
                                            beyond hydro power lines
                                            -- electricity

                           

                                            two blue herons fly
                                            across the Nation River
                                            white and grey water

Copyright © 2000 by Joy Hewitt Mann

About the Poet

Joy Hewitt Mann has been writing poetry and fiction since 1989 when her youngest son started school. She has since had over 400 poems published in magazines such as Amelia, Whetstone and The Malahat Review, and has had haiku -- which she began writing five years ago -- published in such magazines as Cicada, black bough, and Modern Haiku. Her first fiction collection, Clinging to Water, will be published by Boheme Press, Toronto, Canada, in June 2000. She is also the editor of a bi-monthly writers' newsletter. In 1997 she was awarded the $5,000 Leacock Award for Poetry. After ten years, Joy still stands in awe at the power of writing; how it can change the writer as much as, if not more than, the reader: "I still have no idea where this wonderful gift comes from." When not writing, Joy runs a large junkstore in Spencerville, Ontario, Canada where she lives in an old, stone mill-house with her husband and three children.

E-Mail: joyhm@ripnet.com

DENIS GARRISON

                                            setting in hedgerow
                                            red sun tangled black branches
                                            ah, the flaming snow

                           

                                            bravely in the breeze
                                            wave these soft blue flags in shreds
                                            irises full-blown

                           

                                            black flocks of grackles
                                            flow into white southern sky . . .
                                            here comes the north wind

                           

                                            wet warm breeze
                                            snow melt swells misty brook
                                            blue crocus bloom

                           

                                            swinging from wing tips
                                            two vultures twirl a funnel
                                            in remnants of fog

                           

                                            in low scudding clouds
                                            a diving hawk disappears . . .
                                            there she is again

                           

                                            last night a deep snow
                                            on the porch rail this morning
                                            two owls side by side

                           

                                            remembering
                                            hovering over stream
                                            a dragonfly

                           

                                            at this ancient well
                                            the old bucket handle shines
                                            deep and green the moss

Copyright © 2000 by Denis Garrison

About the Poet

Denis M. Garrison lives in Monkton, Maryland in the U.S.A.
His biography is available at his Poetry Page.

E-Mail: denismgarrison@yahoo.com

S E N R Y U

ISSARA JONES

                                            becoming clear
                                            the window and I
                                            are one

                           

                                            Spilt coffee!
                                            My breath dries
                                            curling page

                           

                                            with tiny kisses
                                            i trace her sensitive hip
                                            butterfly tattoo

                           

                                            prison yard --
                                            colorful tattoos bounce
                                            between thick grey walls

Copyright © 2000 by Issara Jones

About the Poet

Issara Rhys-Jones resides on the Outer Banks of North Carolina where
he works on a number of art/business projects both large and small.
When the weather is right he writes haiku or senryu for a few web zines.

E-Mail: Iessara@Yahoo.com

DENIS GARRISON

                                            gone two years
                                            now she finds his note
                                            weeping widow

                           

                                            first kanji drawn
                                            dam is breached and
                                            ink flows

                           

                                            peach petal on snow
                                            my Jane would have been
                                            ten today

                           

                                            dew dampened boots
                                            torn letters litter bridge
                                            mourning wind

                           

                                            garbagemen have left
                                            cans lying in the gutter -
                                            crows inspect the job

                           

                                            snowy sidewalk
                                            amongst many footprints
                                            one red mitten

Copyright © 2000 by Denis Garrison

About the Poet

Denis M. Garrison lives in Monkton, Maryland in the U.S.A.
His biography is available at his Poetry Page.

E-Mail: denismgarrison@yahoo.com

Copyright © 2000-2001 by Denis M. Garrison.

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