Introduction
Some years back, I grew interested haiku. Initially, because these short gems struck me as the perfect match for Twitter—a marriage made in digital heaven, as it were. Besides, how hard could it be to write a seventeen-syllable poem.
As I normally do when my interest alights on something, I read several books on the subject (that this time included Higginson and Harter’s wonderful The Haiku Handbook) and from there proceeded to immerse myself in several well-known haiku masters, such as Bashō, Buson, Issa, Shiki, et al.
Meanwhile, I began trying my hand at these things, initially strictly adhering to the five-seven-five syllable format, which, I soon came to find out (from online self-proclaimed haiku gurus), was quite a crude adaptation of that principle seeing that Japanese syllables do not necessarily correspond to English syllables (which are, by expert reckoning, quite unwieldy by comparison). Also, reading a lot of (published and respected) English language haiku I soon realized that both the five-seven-five and the seventeen-syllable “rules” had long since been abandoned by the better (and more creative) haiku poets.
As a result of seeing things in this particular light, I soon began taking liberties with the five-seven-five rule but for some odd reason the seventeen-English-syllable statute remained on the books, refused to leave, had found a home in me—if for no other reason than that my little haikus (which I soon named Wolfkus for an obvious reason) seemed to percolate to the surface fully grown and just about always in a string of seventeen-syllable creations. And when they did not, say they surfaced as an eighteen-syllable Wolfku, or a sixteen-syllable one, well, then I discovered that when I sand-papered the longer ones into seventeen, or added some air into the shorter ones into seventeen: the meaning seemed clearer, more definite—besides, this was a fun exercise (I love language and its many words and their bendable uses).
Struck by something, an image, a feeling, a thought, before long this seventeen-syllable raft came bopping to the surface (having been let go of by some curious and creative, though shy, deep-sea Wolfku deity). During a morning’s walk by the Pacific, three or four or sometimes five of these Wolfkus might surface, and it was all I could do to remember them all until I returned home to a pen or a keyboard.
Sometimes I did forget them, memory like a sieve these days.
Before not so long, many of these Wolfkus arrived more as aphorisms than true haikus, as little containers of distilled perhaps philosophical reflection. Well, since many of them struck me (the creator, or recipient might be a better word) as both unique and insightful, who was I to call a halt to this quite enjoyable, if curious, phenomenon.
A phenomenon that still flourishes and seems to have no intention to do otherwise, for I rarely return from an hour’s walk without some seventeen-syllable epigram or other.
Seeing, though, that the earth from which these Wolfkus sprung (and still spring) was replete with impressions and sometimes micro-epiphanies, I thought that perhaps it was time to revisit these Wolfkus and examine this fertile soil for what else it might hold. What, indeed, I wondered, gave birth to them, what carried them from darkness to light? And where did they, in turn, carry me? This is what gave birth to the idea of Wolfku Musings—a collection of Wolfkus and the soil that sprung them.
I have published Wolfku Musings, Book One, and will soon publish Book Two, to be followed by Three… Four… et cetera.
Meanwhile, I realized that I really should assemble a sort of archive of those Wolfkus that I have posted online, by now running into the several hundred, and also publish future Wolfkus Archives as I write and post them.
Lately, say over the last many months, I’ve begun to give my Wolfkus titles as well, just for, well, I don’t know why really, just felt right. As I now compile these Wolfkus from oldest to newest, I’ve also added titled to those who never had one.
All this said, here then, the first installment.
Wolfkus 1 - 100
— 1 —
Gates
A wide-open gate
hinges rusted brown with years
Who left it open?
— 2 —
Songs
A song ends too soon
An ear catching up
What was that color?
— 3 —
Falling
An edge, a leaning
Trunk and roots:
a fierce grasping
Wishing he could fall
— 4 —
Twitter
Tweet, tweet, chirp, tweet, tweet
Tweet, chirp, tweet, tweet goes the bird
So, she knows haiku?
— 5 —
Spring Odors
After the light rain
Released by
a grateful Earth
My nose so happy
— 6 —
Yes
I saw Chris Squire’s bass
It looked like Jacob’s ladder
Cautioning the sky
— 7 —
Motion
If life is motion
Breathing: the atom and quark
Then everything lives
— 8 —
Fog
One bark, many chirps
The fog is dense this morning
Voices carry well
— 9 —
Fog
The seagull through fog
Silent, airy, wing—wing steps
Fainter, into white
— 10 —
Carnivores
Who made such a world
Where for one being to live,
another must die?
— 11 —
The Rose
The rose: tall and proud
The blade of grass: envious
The sky loves them both
— 12 —
Photoshop
A thousand strange rules
An alternate universe
some call Photoshop
— 13 —
Lies
He lied: a crime worse
than killing—for trusting him
we could die and die
— 14 —
Cars
Shiny metal skin
These animals have round legs
and very bad breath
— 15 —
Morning Evening
My morning poem
Alive from lack of this world
Come evening she’s dead
— 16 —
Control-Z
Too often these days
I don’t apologize, I
look for Control-Z
— 17 —
Light
Waiting for the sun
A thousand lilies, heads bowed
Listening for light
— 18 —
Dumped
Put in a small box
They named it me, wrapped it tight
with soft steel ribbons
— 19 —
Bonsai
The startled haiku
found and nursed
and pruned and loved
Audible bonsai
— 20 —
Blood
Pages, red pages
History: vast and pregnant
with man killing man
— 21 —
Basics
The two guides I trust
to lead me through this life are
Frugal and Simple
— 22 —
Memory
I tread memory
Soft and treacherous carpet
Falling, falling through
— 23 —
Calm Waters
Young man meets woman
In a sexless equation
Do they still attract?
— 24 —
Bach
The Northern Lights of
Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in
D-Minor: My home
— 25 —
Purpose
What do they live for
the ants, the bees, the spiders?
Small joys and sorrows
— 26 —
Albums
Looking for
a younger self
I find that I
am music—
round, black
plastic
— 27 —
God
Out there, on the rim
Where the ocean falls away
sits God, feet dangling
— 28 —
Choices
The flower, loudly
to the bee: pick me, pick me
So many choices
— 29 —
Language
As the human race tumbles
see it drag language down
with it as well
— 30 —
Poetry
A poem is a story with
galaxies of
spiritual space
— 31 —
Ants
Six-legged purpose
some red
some black
proudly crossing
the path
Look out
— 32 —
True Lies
The beautiful lie
that tells the truth
is the deeper
name of fiction
— 33 —
New Town
Cocooned by moment
falling snow
begin again
dry air, bay window
— 34 —
Birth
First silence
Then sight
Then astonishment
Then voice
Then sound
Then new word
— 35 —
Food
God was done
creating—
We asked:
What do we eat?
He said:
Each other
— 36 —
Flight
Pigeons strain and flap
their mostly inefficient
airborne miracles
— 37 —
Killers
Pelicans fishing
Rising, diving, splash, rising
Glorious killers
— 38 —
Words
Last I saw the Word
was drowning
midst cold and
illiterate spindrift
— 39 —
Leonardo
Each night, the tide dreams
a new sandy masterpiece
for dawn to cherish
— 40 —
Problematic
A Gordian knot
With no Alex to cut it
That is what life is
— 41 —
Beauty
There is no greater
beauty, nor love more profound
than this: mind to mind
— 42 —
Ocean
The long, lazy wave
lands on the crescent shore with
a white, blissful smile
— 43 —
Darkness
A ray of darkness
appeared, shining the dust motes
from angels to bats
— 44 —
Air
My blood is happy
With every lungful of air
So many new friends
— 45 —
Ocean Horses
A thousand horses
Manes of spray and nostrils foam
Hoofs cresting, landing
— 46 —
Forbearance
Her forbearance is
saintly, seeding her heart with
wonderful future
— 47 —
Crows
Two crows side by side
She’s giving him an earful
He’s blinking a lot
— 48 —
Oxygen
The air was so still
I heard the trees exhale their
fine, fresh oxygen
— 49 —
Jarrett
The grand piano
sprinkles beauty in the air
Keith Jarrett’s fingers
— 50 —
Death
Among ships, this name
is only whispered—their word
for death: Gadani
— 51 —
Killers
To eat what has bled
to feed you is a killing
by distant proxy
— 52 —
Island
I am an island
I stand on the ocean floor
obstinate, windswept
— 53 —
Sleepless
Many yesterdays
move about—talking, laughing
I’m trying to sleep
— 54 —
Dragons
A flock of small birds
alights to feed—quaint, thought I
Dragons, thought the ant
— 55 —
Funeral
The word of God in
the summer heat…
He died from a dirty needle
— 56 —
Choreography
The rhythm of meals
The rhyme of routine
the day as dance, as poem
— 57 —
Bad Karma
Killing as hobby
Ending life as stress relief
Hatred bound in skin
— 58 —
Muscle Cars
Testosterone sings
wild, mechanical horses
A sunflower turns
— 59 —
A pair—
What purpose have you
said the sun to the skylark
—To stir the sleeper
What purpose have you
said the skylark to the sun
—To steer the seeker
— 60 —
Suns
One sun sets
A trillion suns
instead
— 61 —
Perspectives
Immeasurably large
Immeasurably small
Man caught in-between
— 62 —
And then…
So still…
A moth hiccups
— 63 —
Stalin
One death a tragedy
A million a statistic
Koba’s a hope
— 64 —
The Body
My body: my car
doors welded shut
— 65 —
Hunter
Hawk wings
absolutely still
Eyes of purest greed
— 66 —
Equanimity
Red sun
Cows unconcerned
Green breakfast
— 67 —
Sparrows
Cow in sparrow cloud
Brown, feathered
bovine thoughts
— 68 —
Poison
Infatuation
Five devious syllables
invading the heart
— 69 —
Emptiness
In an empty room
An absence of many things
A presence of none
— 70 —
Words
The Bible, Quran
Pali Canon, the Vedas:
So, so many words
— 71 —
Alien
In a sea of green:
a smidgeon of yellow
Illegal immigrant
— 72 —
Viewpoint
A fresh-view intake
once wide open
all clogged up now
by ego
— 73 —
Crash Landing
One wing broken
Useless weight
Soft landing unlikely
— 74 —
Identities
One by one
shed identities
dry snake skins
gather at my feet
— 75 —
Strawberries
Warm rain
Strawberries
too drunk to care
mold away.
She surveys damage
— 76 —
A Challenge
Rolling off a log
For compulsive balancers
Not an easy task
— 77 —
Blood
Sated Earth, you’ve had
your fill of lives and lives and
lives—insatiable
— 78 —
Right View
Non-self observing
the self: creeks, rivers, chasms
Dark scales fall away
— 79 —
Faith
God may not always
answer your prayer
for He might be busy
elsewhere
— 80 —
Rage
In stillness a thought
arises—weary, unfed
An enraged monkey
— 81 —
Dhammapada
I think I am
Therefore, I am
René Descartes
as Buddhist convert
— 82 —
Glue
This mortal fusion
of the spirit with the flesh
Superglue—buckets
— 83 —
Wind
Strong wind
to young caterpillar—
Sorry, Kid
It’s nothing personal
— 84 —
Self
Defining ourselves
by likes, by views, by dislikes
It’s a full-time job
— 85 —
Sleep
Sunset sees him stir
This furtive and ruthless
slayer of Awake: Sleep
— 86 —
Ego
Threaten the ego
with extinction and it will
think you to death
— 87 —
Translator
The ear hears the eye
The eye sees the ear
The heart translates
— 88 —
Escapes
A dungeon
walls a mile thick
Easier to escape
than sex… than pride
— 89 —
Girlfriend
Farther away than away
and longer
Gone to Death now
I miss her
— 90 —
New View
That fish, high in the air
in the osprey’s beak
startled by scenery
— 91 —
Glider
Silent through the air
The hawk is made for gliding
Drops of rain agree
— 92 —
Wishes
Lives rooted yearn to roam
Lives roaming yearn to stay
Ah, the greener grass
— 93 —
Logic
Sex was introduced
when we would not procreate
without inducement
— 94 —
Mystery
Why are we born
so much dumber
than when we died—
hours earlier
— 95 —
Memories
The September wind
stern, with the promise of snow
I am twelve again
— 96 —
Cataracts
This long and winding
country lane of memories
foreshortened by fog
— 97 —
Mystery
If we can know
the highest truth
Why would we
Ever… let up?
— 98 —
Anomaly
After the warm autumn rain
The gullible landscape
fooled into green
— 99 —
Moped
Ice on the puddles
No snow—engine well-tuned
Life lived to teen fullest
— 100 —
Fog Bow
Two golden feet
a heavenly arch apart
Unmoved?
Not an option
— End —