the james connection
 [1/23-8/21/03]
cindy tebo marlene mountain stephen addiss an'ya gary gach debra wooolard bender jennie townsend
nancy smith paul conneally carmen sterba francine porad gary blankenship
a series of mountain sonnets
linked to
 SUGGESTIONS FOR WRITING HAIKU IN ENGLISH
by
 James W. Hackett  1
 The present is the touchstone of the haiku experience, so
 always be aware of this present  moment.  'this present moment'
[1/22-3/24/03]
 my scrapbook of memories presently without a haiku
 on this gray day the next moment a repeat of the last one hundred
looking for my watch trusting its having been here somewhere once before
 meditation period that last grain slides through the sandglass
past as present present as present future as present
 shadows of the past hints of the future tint the present
forgetting the past i wander in mindless ecstasy
 jwh arrives in kamakura with a mean rice curry crave*
 just now the hiss of sugar dissolving in hot tea
 deep in thought exploring a mouth ulcer with my tongue
 still part of the problem old definitions and new
 making up an identity nicely packaged
 under the sagging christmas tree a slip of broken ribbon
 dear diary a brand new war started today
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*Sept. 10, 002, whf
  2
 Remember that nature is the province of haiku.
 (Carry a notebook for recording your haiku experiences.)  'nature'
[1/22-3/27/03]
 mother nature calling me in the middle of the woods without toilet paper
 a bigleaf maple shakes off rain my scratches run unreadable
 droplets inscribing spring on leaves silence of the birds
 in the dentist's chair my haiku notebook underneath the x-ray apron
 swallow calligraphy leaving no traces
 crossing weblets abandoned in dust between the panes
 the 'province of haiku' clueless i scan maps of france and canada
 shakah brah go straight to hawai'i and don't pass the parrots
 she touches everything song notes in the book margins
 heavy snow i put in an order for stinging nettle jeans
 what's nature an angler throws a rod into the creek in anger
 fishing fly 'it's not nice to fool mother nature' 
daddy long legs race the winner disappears
 end of winter birds at the feeder as if no time's past
1ct 2gb 3gg 4a 5sa 6ns 7cs 8dwb 9jt 10pc 11mm 12fp 13ct 14gg  3
 Contemplate natural objects closely... unseen wonders will reveal themselves.  'unseen wonders'
[1/22-3/32/03]
 dead fly in the pitcher plant another drowning i couldn't stop
 beneath the wet lumber a gray slug grows towards spring
 young crippled smiling she panhandles rush-hour traffic back & forth
 leaky pipe the garter snake opens its soft mouth
 the homeless woman gazes at the postman
 forgotten leeks left in august to return for christmas
 nose to nose with the neighbor's dog i require stitches
 pressured into a mammogram one breast then the other reflates
 the gentlest of squirms this baby born at fifteen weeks
 the swing of a golfer caught in strobe alley
 mountains and caves on tv where is that long tall 'bin'
 no bison but a sketch of pictographs of old
 where beetles feast sap weeps from the pine's amber heart
 scent of gardenias a swarm of ants on pure white petals
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 Interpenetrate with nature. 
Allow subjects to express their life through you.
That art Thou. 'interpenetrate'
[3/26-5/1/03]
 carpenter bee hole perfectly round bores into my awareness
 wasps fooled by false spring paper the front porch
 the times falling open at the sports pages
 with hardly a cloud in luminous blue the sun in my heart
 a thunderstorm splatters through the screen full of the night
 paint tossed onto the canvas my random technique
 humidity seeps into my pours until the autumn wind blows
 that restless feeling what a relief the breaking storm
 pushed down the steps the sense knocked into me
 spring weather a squirrel's nest sags in the branches
 symbolically female an owl in the moonlight
 a fragrant breeze my step lightens
 the fishmonger's call across the marketplace beautiful flies
 scales iridescently flash off the blade
1dwb 2gb 3pc 4gg 5mm 6fp 7cs 8ns 9ct 10jt 11a 12cs 13pc 14dwb  5
 Reflect upon your notes of nature in solitude and quiet. Let
 these be the basis of your haiku poems.  'solitude'
[3/25-7/30/03]
 twirling bird feeder pine and camellia nod to each other
 deep into sunset when i'm without words the bobwhite
 soundscape without limit in the hackett garden
 homestead the whole of it spread before me at the gate
 just the other animals and me a beautiful dreary day
 throwing a rock from the cliff into mist waiting wait...
 the call of a ring neck beyond the traffic circle
 one hundred years happening right now
 i put my head under the bath-water just for the sound
 all's quiet this morning save our resident meadowlark
 alone after mother's day transplanting gifts of flowers
 footsteps echo final walk-through the empty house
 at the edge of the canyon i welcome nothing
 beached jellyfish becoming invisible
1fp 2ct 3gg 4jt 5mm 6mm 7gb 8sa 9pc 10a 11cs 12fp 13gb 14dwb  6
 Write about nature just as it is... be true to life!  'true to life'
[3/22-4/8/03]
 another storm leaky roofs and widow-makers
 the daylilies range and range from two to eight inches
 the old hound eating cat droppings
 in the apartment lease no pets allowed empty bird house
 backspace key until there's nothing left to erase
 woken by a dog fox at the trashcan
 first one child then they all flock around a fallen nest
 first pimples on the girl's smooth brow
 next to the station more cherry blossoms than people
 the heart-seizing beauty of night war in blue and green
 darn rainbows so quickly fading always fading
 end of winter ducks at the feeder no time passed
 ripples spring twilight fades from each one
 online problems i'd have written about dogwood leaves if not
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 Choose each word very carefully.
Use words that clearly express what you feel. 'what you feel'
[3/31-4/22/03]
i don't give a shit and call it haiku to advance art a wee bit
 life and living exactly the same only different
 explosion in the field my mind drifts to the milkweed pod
 this silent tension of another day without any money
 where is that dancer with the perfect lead missing from the center?
 after destruction the healing of land body and soul comes slowly
 how the surgery and scars hurt more than my spreading cancer
 a one-legged marathon runner crosses the line
 2 blonde 4-year-old girls at the beach each echoes what the other says
 'oh! what a relief it is!' families of returned mia’s
 the wet clay turning on the kickwheel as a space opens
 again the first day of transmigration into an ant
 sixty the relentless morph into grandfather accelerates
 i wanted the iris to open yesterday a mind of its own
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 8
 Use verbs in the present tense.  'verbs in the present tense'
[4/7-7/8/03]
 write here is a flower unfolding in turbulent times
 if you're going to do it might as well do it now
 wanting to say ‘thank you’ but feeling too grateful to
 thorny rosebush the morning newspaper whose keeper you are
 give worry donate fret contribute
 become a part of the under layer of lilting leaves
 as i write the wind detaches blossoms and sends them to my doorstep
 drive to the art museum to view photographed constructions
 i mistake a broom and discarded poster for art
 the girl next-door arranges dandelions in a jar
 our conversation about the air we're in
 flight to mazatlan with loch lomond lyrics circling my brain   
 map of the mall i find the value of x in the e-x-it sign
 someone's sneakers still up there on the power line
1jt 2pc 3gg 4a 5sa 6ns 7cs 8dwb 9gb 10pc 11mm 12fp 13ct 14gg  9
 For added dimension choose words that suggest the season,
 location, or time of the day.  'seasonal words'
[4/22-7/30/03]
 before birdsongs the sound of the newspaper delivery boy
 eleven or twelve scallions bound tightly with a rubber band
 straw in the manger and strawflower bunches upside-down
 roses in summer autumn winter spring
 noonday sun rising cathedral window patterns on the wall
 the sun slants low and things aglow in its light begin to blush
 solstice uncoiling the garden hose a butterfly
 dewpoint the moistness of a snake on a rock
 my mother's birthday on june 21st
 the bewitching hour's downpour no place to go but up
 afternoon nap the centipede chooses the left nike
 my new loafers the puppy's chew toy
 man in the moon half full or half empty
 first nasu on my dinner plate
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 Use only common language.  'common language'
[5/1-7/1/03]
 the cat knows i know she knows i'm talking about her
 after she finds the "right word" the poet police take it away
 yellow snow the jogger's foot propped on a fire hydrant
 shit my shoe finds the neighbor's dog's
 come see mommy come see another wormfrogbuggrub wonder
 'swing lo sweet chariot' propane tanks floating down the river
 after she eats one of her young the neighbor's chicken spanked
 getting ready to leave the dog everywhere in my path
 rubs my ankle as she pads by
 muggy heat behind eyelids pinprick stars in a red sky
 june full moon bright commonwealth coyote howls
 dull day but a multitude of flies in the garbage
 curb stone words remind me to look right
 accompanying nasty face and universal gesture
1dwb 2cs 3a 4gb 5jt 6ct 7mm 8ns 9sa 10fp 11gg 12a 13pc 14fp  11 
 Write in three lines which total approximately 17 syllables.
 Many haiku experiences can be well expressed in the
 Japanese line arrangement of 5, 7, 5 syllables - but not all.  'approximate 17 syllables'
[4/23-7/8/03]
 never to return the moth leaves my fingertip and flies through light rain
 with daisies to plant waking to rain and birdsong at the dark window
 cherry petals drift onto the potted fir tree visions of fairies
 another pair of jeans in my wardrobe become the wrong size
 my favorite shirt belly buttons missing ripped torn tossed
 out the train window wires on the telephone poles swooping like swallows
 no cow manure here a mound of earth with holes in spokewheel fashion
 promised land all the rainbow i need in every color iris
 last night's dream of youth trim uniforms and joining the military
 perpetuation of a bad myth i'll pass on the math
 mu mu mu mu mu begins the monk nantembo's favorite haiku
 a picturebook farm with ten cows my favorite foreign postage stamp
 seen from the freeway fish-shaped cloud descends into the lips of a hill
1a 2ns 3cs 4dwb 5gb 6sa 7jt 8ct 10mm 11sa 12jt 14gg  12
 Avoid end rhyme in haiku. Read each verse aloud to make
 sure that it sounds natural.  'natural sound'
[5/5-7/30/03]
 sifting pollen ears of the marmalade cat twitch
 tiny soda pop bubbles dissipate i'm on the mend
 tick tick ticks all around us dropping to the forest floor
 hiss and clunks of a radiator as traffic goes by
 deep in wooded hills the town spring gurgles
 hammer saw and backhoe the city moves its edges
 buzzing right by me a hummingbird engine
 a bee foxglove in a the noise of
 her only quietude is at the laundromat
 raindrops cease the murmur of the river moves closer
 wind not in the willow not in the pine not in the cinnamon ferns
 independence day celebration rattles the trailer no sleep tonight
 creaking pines my bones ache too
 orange peel grins from grandma's mouth
1ns 2fp 3jt 4sa 5gg 6gb 7ct 8pc 9a 10cs 11mm 12gb 13ct 14dwb  13
 Remember that lifefulness, not beauty, is the real quality of haiku.  'lifefulness'
[7/9-8/18/03]
 no portrait in the attic the dip and dive of swallows
 'bring 'em on' now that the 2-toned are abloom the ditch lilies
 kickboxing while holding hands school-age brothers
 4 fireflies in a mayonnaise jar the lights go out
 on canning day sour pickles in blue glass
listening to an operatic duet on the radio
 day camp the smallest boy practices his throws through lunch
 teen age bus boy counts his tip money for the third time
 check-out clerk stops to smell the woman's roses before he bags them
 the sound of bluebottles in the smell of a dead pigeon
 one wing broken a sparrow flutters across the parking lot
 the soldier swallows to think he might die here in iraq
 windchimes' occasional ping a bird's call a sunbeam's flicker on a leaf this peaceful day
 movie channel's ‘men in black’ ends with a peal of thunder
1pc 2mm 3cs 4ct 5a 6sa 7jt 8fp 9gg 10pc 11gb 12gg 13ns 14dwb  14
 Never use obscure allusions: real haiku are intuitive, not
 abstract or intellectual.  'intuitive'
[7/14-8/14/03]
 that first splay-fingered touch a child in the autumn grass
 the front doorbell another replacement window salesman
 outside my kids and the blue angels screaming adrenaline rush
 overwhelmed as usual i stop to smell the roses
 on the restaurant table two yellow roses well almost roses
 on my feet black dog twitching dreams at the window misted greens
 french vanilla my moist tongue responds to the flavor
 summer afternoon the boys tell stories about someday
feet tangling in the creek we remember fireflies
 what's a made-up god know about sex anyway
 waxing moon thinking of birds the housecat yawns
 fifteen times more toxic than a rattler i release the black widow
 back to the earth worms from the tackle box
 westerly wind th'dust 'o bones o'them miners wha'found th'motherload
1jt 2pc 3fp 4a 5sa 6ns 7cs 8jt 9gb 10mm 11gg 12a 13ct 14dwb  15
 Don't overlook humour, but avoid mere wit.  'avoid mere wit'
[6/29-8/18/03]
 seen through the leaves a white-haired man dancing
 turning sixty now i understand my sister 'autumn'
 oh issa see how the fly doesn't wring its dirty hands
 single living my imac set to laugh at my mistakes
 in place of the daily haiku a text-message from the white house
 balancing my checkbook the surplus becomes a deficit
 figures adjusted to be in sync with the bank's
 in my empty wallet a fortune
 gold mulberry leaves lighten the turf my silk shell darkens
 enough sense to come in out of the rain tho i didn't want it
 grape stomp it feels good to be stained
 a tire swing not entirely empty length of frayed rope
 silent nun in watch repair shop present perfect
 dear god warmed by bedcovers in my morning prayer
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 Work on each poem until it suggests exactly what you want
 others to see and feel.  'work on each poem'
[7/9-8/13/03]
 chimes of iron chain clinking against flagpole across freeway
 frogs croaking soprano alto tenor and bass
 the telephone rings i start the second line yet again
 renga my inner child learning to take turns
 creased newspapers the tired faces of commuters
 the receding storm holds back dawn yet stars still dim
 summer storms the pain of sighs caught up in my ribcage
 oh dear the worked-on poem with a perfect worked-on look
 the peacock erects its feathers for zoo-goers
 57 years the a-bomb survivors still see the mushroom cloud
 august 6th us television explores volcanoes
 pele's tears i don't listen to his explanation
 a thousand words plus a photo of his latest wife
 changing clothes i've become another woman for my husband
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 Remember that haiku is a finger pointing at the moon, and
 if the hand is bejewelled, we no longer see that to which it
 points.  'avoid excess decoration'
[7/10-8/21/03]
 july 10 it's yet another day of just being
 cooler under the trees now that the planting is done
 inspection over termites work clearing the yard of stumps
 the sadness in grandma's blue eyes summer evening
 his laughter our morning noon and night
 for her rescue private lynch thanks americans and iraqis
 pulled out of the lake into the boat the golden retriever
 window-washer i wave too
 since mom died not a thread in the sewing machine
 august sun a red tractor fades in the field
 sleeping all day she takes a nap at night tabby cat
 students back at summer's end book-bikes-buses block my driveway near suppertime
 a dandelion and two spent joints by the skate-park bench
 eleven dog days left 'til labor day fleas come indoors too
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 Honour your senses with awareness, and your Spirit with
 zazen or other centering meditation. The Zen-haiku mind
 should be like a clear mountain pond: reflective, not with
 thought, but of the moon and every flight beyond...  'reflection'
[7/10 -8/13/03]
 thunderstorms clear the pond muddy what goes around
 a closer look to note the bend of the willow
 in the spirit of lewis and clark our capsized canoe
 reeling as the geese fly over ripples in the lake
 market day i find my face in the eye of a huge sea-bream
 the cat walks away only broccoli in the shopping bag
 after all the greenery the long walk home
 is not the haiku mind of nature so knowing no 'shoulds'?
in the garden of my childhood a small tree to pray under
 pecks in watery grass while her kid plays with dandelions
 clover and bees and a yellow circle under the chin
 her letters lost among pictures of it's a small world
 carousel music the galaxy goes round and round
 fast afloat with the moon to infinity and beyond
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The James Connection was coordinated by paul conneally and marlene mountain for the marlene mountain section of the World Haiku Review which conneally was editor of at the time.
The mountain sonnet is a form developed by paul conneally with marlene mountain which uses mountain's one line haiku link form as a usually themed 14 line poem made up of 14 one line linked haiku.
Conneally asserts that marlene mountain is one of the most talented and influential haiku poets of the late 20th and early 21st century continually challenging readers to confront what haiku / haikai was is and might be.
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