night terminus
on the platform
unbroken snow
Published by
Charles Trumbull
Charles Trumbull is an editor for Encyclopaedia Britannica and lives in Evanston, Illinois. He has been writing haiku since 1991. He was editor (1996-2002) of the Haiku Society of America Newsletter, president of the HSA in 2004 and 2005, and an organizer of the Haiku North America 1999 conference. He is currently editor of Modern Haiku and proprietor of Deep North Press, a publisher of haiku books. No Web page yet; e-mail: trumbullc at comcast dot net View all posts by Charles Trumbull
can’t go for “terminus” in a haiku–just too heavy a word
hmm, terminus: the end, goal, or limit; a point at either extremity of a travel line; l.__terms
what was it i aspired …
snow covered dreams
ashes not seen
chinese opera
his broom that is
the horse
end of the line —
off in the distant
her wind swept red hair
–
transit security…
just some mad dog
in the wino’s bag
paul minter your haiku is great.
prado
terminus a quo–
this winter night
the darkness blends
at dawn,
on the snow from the last night
footprints of sparrows