The Troubadour by RLBronteBrown

December Haikus, poems, and more

Emmanuel is born to the Father's delight, -Israel’s long waited hope. 
The Word sang its poignant story. A pure melody for each heart to hear.
For those with ears to hear, it was a soft melodious tune.
Like the tiny beats of a hummingbird’s wing, a whispered melody arrived.
The dawning light of a new beginning steadies our thirst.
Arousing a sanguine hope in a song-less world for the coming hope.
The morning light hummed as the Light sang the Troubadour’s song of our redemptive story.
anticipation
Emmanuel is born
the Father's delight

Israel's anticipation
Emmanuel is born
to the Father's delight.
last year's version: 
A song-less world yearns
to hear the troubadour’s song,
echos of joy.

Tiny beats,
the word sings a melody
that only the heart hears.

A single voice announces,
the king's arrival,
he dwells with us.

Through doubt and despair
hope rings a new
redemptive song.

The Troubadour song
illuminates the darkness,
dispelling fear.

The morning light hums,
hope shines-
the frame repeats.

Joy to the world.
oblivion 
aquarium at the mall
trapped within
The Troubadour

The Eastern Star shined
through the night
illuminating the way.

The Word sang a melody
for my heart to hear,
poignant and pure.

For those with ears
to hear, it was soft
and gentle.

Like the tiny beats
of an hummingbird's wings,
a whispered message arrived.

A single voice announced
the King's arrival.
He dwelt with us.

A song-less world
yearned for echos of the
troubadour’s aria.

Despair dispelled.
The Troubadour sang
the redemptive story.

The morning light hummed,
arousing a sanguine hope,
the frame repeats-

Joy to the World.
Friends in all shapes and sizes
red, brown, black, and white--
each one precious
Wintry winds
whistling a ceaseless
threnody

Haiku Music Challenge December 2022

Shear Cirrus trails
in a clear, wintry
blue sky.
motionless sun
the darkest moment
light breaks through

brief magical moment
the sun stands still
winter begins

winter solstice

Solstice 

scintillating rays
stretch summer's boundaries
nightide catenates

summer solstice June 21, 2022


nightide meets at winter's gate
light concatenates

#haiku #HaikuSaturday #haikuseed

winter solstice
Dec 21, 2022

6 facts about the winter solstice

The magic moment. While many focus on the winter solstice as a day in the calendar, what we are actually talking about is a very specific moment which is over almost as soon as it has begun. ...

The Sun stands still. ...
Winter begins. ...
Nine hours darker. ...
The earliest sunset. ...

brief magical moment
the sun stands still
winter begins


8 fascinating facts about the summer solstice
It arrives like clockwork. ...
Time stands still. ...
It's not the earliest sunrise of the year. ...
been observed throughout human history. ...
Flooding the Nile. ...
Greek feasts. ...
Ancient Roman celebration of home and hearth. ...
It's still celebrated around the world today.

March/ September Spring Equinox
March Equinox

Terrestrial tides collide
high, but twice a year.
rising sun and moon poised.

A morrowless day
arriving on the equinox
perfectly balanced.

January sky
Its sheer so clear, so blue.
Nothing leaves a mark.

Wintry sky, shear blue bright and clear cirrus trails.
Shear Cirrus trails in a clear, wintry blue sky.
The dawning light
 of a new beginning 
 slates our thirst.

Arousing a sanguine hope for the coming year.
A salubrious optimism laced with intent, tempered.
12/30- Slake 12/31- Sanguine 1/01- Salubrious Owls Nest Challenge

Season’s Graceful Dance

Inner autumn calls,  
embracing a
seasonal change.  

The wind howls 
for rest,
as light narrows.

Counterfeit death nears
God’s grace is 
revealed.

With the last harvest 
winter comes, 
the weary soul find rest.

@Blue_Owl #HaikuSaturday Grace
Winter grants Fall's wish 
for an encore flower dance, 
frost procrastinates.

Summer's warmth lingers.
Harvest-in, farmer's delight-
Sweet whispers of thanks. 

Winter winds whistling
Indian Summer's last stance
Bowing gracefully
Posted Haiku Foundation for Early Harvest Aug 2022
Nature's splendor yields 
a harvest of abundance, 
Thankfulness expressed. 
Inner autumn calls, 
time to embrace season’s change. 
The wind howls for rest. 
Light narrows yet shines. 
Truth displayed for all to see, 
God’s bountiful grace. 
Counterfeit death nears. 
The last harvest, winter comes. 
Weary souls find rest.

November’s return

@Bleu_Owl 
Winter winds whistling 
Autumn's last stance-
a graceful genuflection. 
#haikuchallenge #HaikuSaturday
Genuflect
seasonal shift

climate change
apposite
Nature reclaims what it intends
sending life's events
to where memories flow.

Slowly evanescing 
time spins 
memories of you

Past lives on in  
family stories, recipes, my nose-  
as treasured memories.
one voice sings a death aria 
Opposite of 
wokeness would be
Apposite 
spring in my steps
alacrity of purpose
wind at my back
toddler's alacrity
something new
everyday
petunias thrive 

with cold persistence
periwinkle's winter wink
elemental fragrance
Saguaro Cactus
alluring
Inner autumn calls,  
embracing a
seasonal change.  

The wind howls 
for rest,
as light narrows.

Counterfeit death nears
God’s grace is 
revealed.

With the last harvest 
winter comes, 
the weary souls find rest.

@Blue_Owl #HaikuSaturday Grace

August Poems and Haikus

First and Thirtieth
Super Moons of August
Sturgeons rise from the Blue
"It will not go out of my mind that if we pass this post and lantern, either we shall find strange adventures or else some great changes of our fortunes." —-Lucy Pevensie, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (C.S. Lewis)
curiosity seekers 
adventures await
let's go together
Southern heat
baked, then released
into a vapor trap. 
cicadas sing
flowers sway in a gentle breeze
summer heat wanes

July Poems

Redundant talking points nailed to your brain are meaningless. Dull minds captured by deceit scream you can’t handle the truth. Yet the truth is easier to swallow than a quagmire of lies. Swim against the stream-

sweetness on the cob
long listening ears
crunch a munch
Log cabin restored
reminiscing the past
historical remembrance
laudable sweetness
memories of a lissome dance
beacons of love
Paintings by Fab Furby
mellifluous battle hymns
majestic observance
God's awe-inspiring hand.

Discernment’s gift is the ability to reason, decipher, and separate subtleties that snare.

Brilliant, yellow hydrants!
Yellow is the new red.
Puppy-chic 
or
Brilliant,
yellow hydrants
Puppy-chic
where imagination,
fairies and pixies
play 
stars in my eyes
a welcome sight,
blue skies
In-between
blue and green
flying high
A mind free to think, will imagine, reason, and then decide to act. A child deserves the right to be protected and grow into adulthood. A mind that is not protected will destroy the heart. Discernment's gift is the ability to reason, decipher, and separate subtleties that snare.

First Encounter

The first time I saw a dead body was in the woods. Uncle Rufus open coffin sat where the porch swing once hung. The rusted ceiling bolts reminded me of what once was. That old dingy porch framed a poignant image. Unintentionally, I took a mental snapshot.
I stood and stared. Death barred the doorway entrance. The splattered sunlight melded with the shadows. The white wood planks faded into the background as if engulfed in sadness. The inner light was gone. Only a shell remained. Nature reclaims what it intends. 
Yet, life lives on where memories flow like a sweet bension between the falling rain--

quiescent tide,
the porch-swing rhythmic pace-
tealights fade
--
First Encounters
First Encounters

The first time I ever saw a dead body was in the woods. The open coffin sat where the porch swing once hung. The rusted ceiling bolts served as a reminder of what once was. The porch framed a poignant image. I took a mental snapshot unintentionally.

I stood and stared. Death barred the doorway entrance as the splattered sunlight melded into the shadows. The white wood planks faded into the background, engulfed in the past. The inner light was gone. Only the shell remained. Nature reclaims what it intends to, sending life's events to where memories flow.

As we headed southeast from Memphis, Tennessee that morning, I had no idea what a funeral entailed. The paved roads gave way to winding backroads layered with gravel and dust. Hours stretch as time slows its pace. You weren’t allowed to ask, “Are we there, yet?”

After a few wrong turns, my aunt remembered the landmark and turned toward our destination. Traveling the backroads of the Mississippi hill country was not meant for newcomers. Country folks have no need for road signs. They get by with a few landmarks and directions as the crow flies.

Great Uncle Rufus was my Papaw's brother. I noted the same pointy nose as mine. Milling about, I listened to whispered stories: sad, funny; yarns and tall tales. Still, people act odd in the presence of death standing on the doorstep. Some ignore the open coffin and pass through the doorway. Some, like me, keep their distance.

Cousins departed for the clearing. Blue sky peeked through the trees, and sunlight warmed our insides. Time giggled along with us as we told our stories. Death remained on the porch which was comforting for a nine-year-old.

From a mischievous twinkle to the shape of a nose to a familiar gait, the past is intertwined with the future. Lessons taught, lessons learned, favorite recipes, a hand--me--down quilt, family stories, and my family nose. Everyday routines are instilled and handed down to the next generation.

faded white wood planks
engulfed in quamoclit,
a reclaimed quiescent


Slowly evanescing
time spins memories
of you

mental snapshot
framed a poignant image
old dingy porch


Haiku format:

Faded white wood planks
engulfed in quamoclit,
a reclaimed quiescent

Rusted ceiling bolts
serve as a reminder
of the porch swing

Now, the open coffin sits.
Sending life's events
to where memories flow.

The inner light gone
reclaimed by nature,
only the shell remains.

YET>
Past lives on in
family stories, recipes, my nose-
as treasured memories.

I was nine years old
This is my story -
retold.

a prismatic wash in a golden mist-
a sweet bension between the falling rain. 
Faded white wood planks
engulfed in quamoclit,
reclaimed quiescent

The first time I saw a dead body was in the woods. The open coffin sat where the porch swing once hung. The rusted ceiling bolts served as a reminder of what once was. That old dingy porch framed a poignant image. Unintentionally, I took a mental snapshot.

I stood and stared. Death barred the doorway entrance. The splattered sunlight melded with the shadows. The white wood planks faded into the background as if engulfed in sadness. The inner light was gone. Only a shell remained. Nature reclaims what it intends to, sending life's events to where memories flow. 


Haiku format:

Faded white wood planks
engulfed in quamoclit,
quiescent and quaint. 

Rusted ceiling bolts 
serve as a reminder 
of the old porch swing 

Now, the open coffin sits. 
Sending life's events 
to where memories flow. 

The inner light gone 
reclaimed by nature, 
only the shell remains. 

YET>
Past lives on in 
family stories, recipes, my nose- 
and treasured memories. 

I was nine years old
This is my story -
retold. 

FMF/June

Friendships are the threads woven in the tapestry of one’s life. 
Iridescent threads
shimmering in sunlight
woven in my heart
FMF/ Sunshine
life's tapestry
Iridescent threads
woven in my heart
I imagine God showing me a tapestry of my life in heaven. Family and friends who have shaped my life will be like shimmering sunbeams woven throughout. The iridescent lines of friendship will burst forth in a prismatic array of colors revealing the depths of God's love.
As iron sharpens iron, so a friend sharpens a friend. Proverbs 27:17

One response to “FMF/June”

  1. aschmeisser Avatar

    Don’t want to see a tapestry
    of my life, because,
    there really is no need to see
    my old life that was.
    Anything there that was good
    will still be on the road ahead,
    and I think I really should
    concentrate on that instead,
    ’cause the God that saves our tears
    also saves each smile,
    and the lights of former years,
    and what was worthwhile
    were sifted at God’s judgement seat
    and these I once again will meet.

    Liked by 1 person

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June Poems and more

6/6- Beauty 6/7- Benign 6/8- Blossom

natural beauty
complementary blossom
gentle and benign
Beauty in the sky
peeking through the trees
Strawberry Moon shines

Fairfield Bay, AR
Purple sky and rosy hues
perfect. 
Strawberry Moon
Luna Moth takes flight
double rarity 
swimming pools, boards games 
hiking trails and waterfalls, 
summer fun begins

#HaikuSaturday #haikufeels #haiku 

time spins 
today's laughter 
with past memories.


Virtual is a hoax
Reality is hands-on
Dewey’s Thoughts  

Imagination-
is key to wading through
dense weeds.   

A mind free to think
imagines, reasons, then decides
to act with deep thought.

@Bleu_Owl deep, Dewey, dense. (CSLewis) (John Dewey)
#HaikuSaturday #haikuchallenge 
Redundant talking points nailed to your brain are meaningless.  
Dull minds captured by deceit scream you can't handle the truth. 
Yet the truth is easier to swallow than a quagmire of lies.
Swim against the stream.
Hegemony media is a hoax.
Reasons train the mind to test, decipher, and separate subtleties that snare. 
Imagination allows thought beyond instant gratification 
to see a reasonable danger. 
Freedom is the ability to think freely and act with a conscience and forethought.

CS Lewis said that imagination is key to reason. But your mind must be clear, lucid, looking beyond instant gratification to see a reasonable danger. Reason trains the mind, and imagination helps you see beyond what you know. Reason will test, decipher, and separate subtleties that snare. You are ready to think -to act beyond just yourself. By RL Brown

May Poems and Haikus

Tempean beauty
Tranquil coastal charmer
Titivated lace

Spanish moss is a beneficial epiphytic flowering plant. Photo taken in Charleston, SC.
Tempean ox-eye
titivated petals bloom
butterflies dance

Leptos' flight guided 
by scented highways,
Saguaro Cactus

Xeric ecosystem
Desert wildlife host
Saguaro cactus flower

Sun-loving shrub
Xenomorphic hibiscus
Aussie delight

Xenogeneic
gene transfer evolution
clueless aftermath
@BleuOwl

Vermilion cardinal
resplendent and showy
pulchritudinous
Autumn
f
a
l
l
s
silent
under the evening
s
n
o
w
p
r
i
s
m
a
t
i
c
wash of golden r a i n
Bittersweet
E
M
O
T
I
O
N
S
in a vintage
B
O
T
T
L
E

Hegemonic media parrots the same song.

Complementary muliebrity of inner beauty blooms.

				          b  
				       r     e
				    e           a
				 n                 u
			       n                      t
 Complementary muliebrity of i                           y--blooms.

(Note: When a woman’s inner and outer beauty shines as one, and the kindness of her soul sparkles, it melds into the essence of femininity—this is something only women do.)

Genetic 
 	haec·
             ce·
                i·ty
            // new_ 
      internal coding 
   life begins at
conception.
the soft adagio of mourning dove
weeds have no place
running wild without boundaries
pachysandra's felicity
Mountain hiking with a friend 
Nature's beauty is a godsend
Eagle eye 
Perch high
Climbing high only to descend
#SundayLimerick
Mountain hiking with friends
Hoping this day never ends
Eagle eye
Perch high
Nature's artistry, little dividends
benison of golden
        r
             a
                   i
                         n
                wafts of perfume,  
         butterfly flight path. 
Haiku Dialog
By Rhonda Brown rhondalbrown1028@gmail.com https://brontebrown2.com/

1. Autumn falls silent under the evening snow 
2. bluegrass under feet, goose pimples felicity 
3. living life in a fog, drifting desperately
4. out on a limb hanging by a stem whirlybirds take flight
5. complementary muliebrity of inner femininity blooms. 
6. sweet benison of sunlit air after golden rain, prismatic joy.
7. Nature's beauty shines in the beholder's eyes, beware of bears.
8. evening shadows on crisscrossing paths, uninterrupted
9. Eventide, tealights glow, cicadas sing, swish goes the porch swing.
10. slow, slow, quick-quick, slow, light dances on the water, footprints in the sand (a swish and a turn)
quiescent tide
rhythmic pace of the porch swing
tealights glow
faded white wood planks
engulfed in quamoclit
quiescent and quaint 
frozen heart
a kind touch
melting point

#HaikuSaturday #haiku #senryu #nature #poem #poetrycommunity #poetry #Poet #haikuchallenge Haiku Dialog- Precipitation @NaHaiWriMo Ache
Hills and hollers of Arkansas
Stomping grounds for Grandpa
Magnificent feat
Nature's treat
Summers' cold water spa

#Limerick #LimerickSunday
Cedar Falls, Petite Jean State Park
#amwriting #poetry
anatomy of a tree
expose for all to see
pen and ink
tickled pink
delightful artistry
#Limerick #LimerickSunday
Rhonda L Brown / USA
rlbrown1028@gmail.com

brontebrown
The following Kyoka haikus are written by Rhonda L Brown (me) Kyoka were Japanese poems that did not conform to the prescribed norms of waka imagery and diction . Kyoka, poems are less serious and more humorous. With its often political and social content, the kyoka tends to be sardonic and ironic. It can parody the waka and use slang. The kyoka also echoes Senryu in its thematic preoccupation with human nature. 1. the night sky frolics under silvery moonbeams in stillness, dreams come night recedes behind the stars- no thought to pending troubles tomorrow sleeps 2. unison parrots hegemony media demise of America wokeness from within- discernment's gift is knowing the difference between the two. 3. If rain no longer fell,    If rain ceased to fall Would poignant tears cease would tears cease to flow?    would your tears no longer flow? If blue dropped from the sky,     Would your smile retrun would your smile return?    If the blue dropped from the sky? If longing is understood,       would you be free to love -    again? H. Gene Murtha Memorial Senryu Contest Rules Two poems per poet Unpublished 1. a morrowless day of whistling threnodies, a fresh tomorrow. 2. Faded white wood planks engulfed in quamoclit, quiescent and quaint.
praj·​na. ˈprəjnə plural -s. : transcendental wisdom or supreme knowledge in Buddhism gained through intuitive insight.
command
Ajna translates as "authority" or "command" (or "perceive"). It is considered the eye of intuition and intellect. Its associated sense organ is the mind.
Hegemony media , Fact or opinion, Null Hypothesis,
This quote is spoken by King Lear about his daughter, Goneril. He's comparing the pain he feels having her—a thankless daughter—to a snake bite. He says that the pain she causes him is “sharper” or more painful than any snake bite.
How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child. 
Slow evanescent
yet, time spins memories
Of you
the sky swishes
the hammock sways 
under a zenith moon, 
untroubled. 
a zephyr breeze
weaves through the zariba hedge
moments  of solitude 
or 
moments before the seige.