Net of Fireflies. Harold Stewart

Net of Fireflies - Harold Stewart


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bending ears of grain,

       The path has narrowed since the heavy rain.

      —JÔSÔ

      KOAN

      What if a housefly on the swatter stands

       In perfect faith, and wipes its feet and hands?

      —ZEN PARADOX

      KANNON'S ANSWER

      Oh, do not kill that fly! It would entreat:

       See how it wrings its little hands and feet!

      —ISSA

      MIDSUMMER VIGIL

      Dawn already, after the shortest night,

       Has dimmed the harbour lanterns, still alight.

      —SHIKI

      LIVING IN POVERTY

      Though faint and from afar, the cool breeze comes

       Crookedly down my alley in the slums.

      —ISSA

      RICH REMINISCENCE

      Those noonday naps: the paper hut so small,

       My feet pressed gingerly against the wall.

      —BASHÔ

      BEDMATES

      Dreaming of battles, was I slain in fight?

       I'm peppered with rosettes: those fleas can bite!

      —KIKAKU

      AN APOLOGY

      Sorry my hut's so small; but you are free

       To do your jumping practice, Mr. Flea.

      —ISSA

      SUMMER AT NIKKÔ

      A glittering sea of green and gold, they shine,

       The sunlit leaves submerging Nikkô Shrine.

      —BASHÔ

      STARTLED

      Out of the golden hall the swallow's fright

       Escapes with swift calligraphy of flight.

      —BUSON

      IN THE FOREST

      The fawn with sunbeam-spotted coat in vain

       Shakes off the butterfly, to doze again.

      —ISSA

      INTOXICATION

      A furry bee nuzzles amid the head

       Of yellow ginger-blossoms pronged with red.

      —HÔ-Ô

      "BUT THOSE UNHEARD . . ."

      Deep in the summer shade, when leaves were mute,

       I heard the Suma Temple's unblown flute.

      —BASHÔ

      WANDERER FROM THE WORLD

      Deepen, O cuckoo in the wood, my mood

       Of mutability, my solitude. . . .

      —BASHÔ

      WEATHERWISE

      Midsummer must have come: the carp all doze,

       Each supping air with half-protruded nose.

      —RAIZAN

      HEAD-HIGH, THE PAMPAS GRASS

      Crossing the summer moor, what guides our course?

       The hay a peasant shoulders for his horse.

      —BASHÔ

      FEAR

      The snake has slid away; but still its eyes

       Glare at me from the grass and paralyse.

      —KYOSHI

      THE RUINS OF TAKADACHI FORT

      Over the warriors summer grasses wave:

       The aftermath of dreams, however brave.

      —BASHÔ

      SPLIT BY THE WIND

      The butterfly, with airy stitches, sews

       Together again the barley's parted rows.

      —SORA

      SILENCE

      A frail white butterfly, beneath the spell

       Of noon, is sleeping on the huge bronze bell

      —BUSON

      MIDSUMMER LULL

      How hot, on afternoons without a breeze,

       The cobwebs hanging from the dusty trees!

      —ONITSURA

      A RAUCOUS SOLITUDE

      What burning stillness! Brass cicada-drones

       Drill their resonance into rocks and stones.

      —BASHÔ

      THE TORTOISE-SHELL CAT

      The brazen sunflower glowed, as underneath

       A tigress bore her cub between her teeth.

      —BUSHI

      AFTER THE DEATH OF HER SMALL SON

      Alas! How far beyond recall today,

       My hunter after dragonflies, you stray!

      —CHIYO

      WITH MINDLESS SKILL

      The erratic swallow, as it dips and veers,

       Almost grazes the nodding barley-ears.

      —IZAN

      IRONICAL

      How hot the pedlar, panting with his pack

       Of fans—a load of breezes on his back!

      —KAKÔ

      PRIMEVAL BREATH

      High in the air the mounting cloud-mass swells,

       Over the dried marsh where a python dwells.

      —SHIKI

      ETERNAL LIFE

      A shrill cicada dinning: from its cry,

       None could foretell how quickly it must die.6

      —BASHÔ

      SATORI

      I bowed before the Buddha, now obscure,

       Now bright with lightning, on the stormy moor.

      —KAKEI

      INDRA'S NET

      The sun-shower, mirrored in a globe of rain,

       Hangs for one moment, never seen again.

      —HÔ-Ô

      LATE VICTORY

      The thunderstorm retreating, sunset still

       Burns on a tree in which cicadas shrill.

      —SHIKI

      THE RIVER'S MOUTH

      Swollen


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