Extra Credit: A picture of a fun summer activity you're saying goodbye to for another year.
Aha! Time for more of my perversion of haiku brevity: epic haiku!
Haiku for the Monsoon
Here I sit, sticky
In the Arizona heat,
Well after midnight.

The monsoon hangs on:
Moisture in the cotton clouds,
No relief in rain.
Labor Day, we'll see
Another hot, humid day;
Summer lingers here.

Farewell to summer?
Shall I mourn tomorrow's high -
"Only" ninety-three?

Drawings of storm-clouds,
I will celebrate if you
Fulfill your promise!

Give me cooling rain!
Water my tree in peril,
Half brown, half new green.
Let the pattern change
As worries of drought recede:
Dry air: monsoon fades.

When the sky stays clear,
We'll smile: one hundred degrees
Should come to an end.
Hail, summer monsoon!
I liked the sights you showed me.
Depart now in peace.

My summer fun was taking all the sunset and monsoon pictures.Here I sit, sticky
In the Arizona heat,
Well after midnight.

The monsoon hangs on:
Moisture in the cotton clouds,
No relief in rain.
Labor Day, we'll see
Another hot, humid day;
Summer lingers here.

Farewell to summer?
Shall I mourn tomorrow's high -
"Only" ninety-three?



Drawings of storm-clouds,
I will celebrate if you
Fulfill your promise!

Give me cooling rain!
Water my tree in peril,
Half brown, half new green.
Let the pattern change
As worries of drought recede:
Dry air: monsoon fades.

When the sky stays clear,
We'll smile: one hundred degrees
Should come to an end.
Hail, summer monsoon!
I liked the sights you showed me.
Depart now in peace.

Karen
Tucson, Summer, Haiku
Your haiku are worth a thousand pictures.
ReplyDeleteAnd your pictures evoke a thousand haiku.
Wonderful photos and haiku!
ReplyDeleteThere actually is a tradition of long form, linked poetry based on the haiku. Look up "renga."
ReplyDeleteyour sunset pics are always great!
ReplyDeletebeautiful post Karen
photos tell stories
ReplyDeleteour hearts long for us to hear...
joy in the morning!
Is it NEVER not summer in Arizona?! I experienced my first monsoon last summer--remind me never to go to Arizona in August!
ReplyDeleteLovely Haikus!
two words: insanely cool.
ReplyDeletei really liked the way you transitioned from summer to bidding it adieu.
i live in california. it's been unusually humid this year. but, i guess it's better than it being obnoxiously dry and causing brushfires.