The following 36-verse kasen renga by thirteen poets was written on 23 November 1991 by participants of that year’s Yuki Teikei Haiku Society retreat at Asilomar Conference Center in Pacific Grove, California. Kiyoko Tokutomi served as our renga master, and we were asked to write verses in 5-7-5 and 7-7 syllables. First published in Geppo XV:2, March–April 1992, page 6.
the huge cypress tree
and my body this cold night
lean into the wind
Patricia Donegan
the shore pines cannot obscure
the white sound of breaking surf
Jim Stanley
sitting cross-legged
friends in a circle chanting—
the full moon rises
Patricia Machmiller
sound in and out of the gong
following the wooden stick
Jane Reichhold
floating down the stream
orange leaves still on their twig
doubled by shadows
Michael Dylan Welch
casting a dark wobbly line
the fisherman on the bank
Jane Reichhold
~ ~ ~
from a nearby hill
the voice of her grandfather
promises a treat
Jerry Ball
sipping the last drop of tea
we read our love in the leaves
Laura Bell
a whippoorwill’s call
startles us from the silence
of the mountain stream
Michael Dylan Welch
after the evening’s crickets
no coyotes . . . and no owl
Christopher Herold
the door burst open—
in comes father shaking snow
in all directions
Jerry Ball
children licking icicles
that melt quickly by the fire
Kimberly Cortner
crimson maple leaf
impaled on the bamboo rake
fluttering wildly
Christopher Herold
Canadian bacon curls
and sizzles in the skillet
Jim Stanley
perfect harvest moon
the patchwork of empty lots
where the firestorm passed
Mary Hill
old quilts stored in the attic—
mother, shivering, brings them down
Kimberly Cortner
cherry blossom time
he photographs his fat wife
the pimple on her nose
Jane Reichhold
teenager on his prom date
wonders if he has B.O.
Kimberly Cortner
~ ~ ~
tulips in the yard
lift their cups to catch raindrops—
toast to beginnings
Bun Schofield
eggs still warm from the hen house
carried to the new neighbor
Jane Reichhold
supper casserole—
mother mixes leftovers
then adds seasoning
Kimberly Cortner
her wine in a plastic cup—
a trace of gaudy lipstick
Michael Dylan Welch
children recruited
for the Christmas festival
at a local church
Jerry Ball
a homeless woman seeks food
finding instead warm clothing
Bob Bussinger
old forest clear-cut
the lumberman folds the map
and pees on a stump
Jane Reichhold
the barmaid’s husky laughter
attracts a man with gold teeth
David Wright
a southern accent
dominates conversation
in the windless night
Jerry Ball
drone of an airplane doing
loop-de-loops and crazy-eights
Patricia Machmiller
an old window pane
distorting the gibbous moon
as I wander past
Christopher Herold
empty field of com stubble—
a lone white heron and crows
Kimberly Cortner
~ ~ ~
in line at the bank,
from folds in his robe, the priest
conjures a wallet
Christopher Herold
after buying croissants, nuns
on a bicycle for two
Michael Dylan Welch
the still, quiet hour
before the first petal falls—
walking hand in hand
Michael Dylan Welch
from his hot sake warmer
he fills up my waiting cup
Laura Bell
plastic champagne glass
chock full of cherry blossoms
left by the lovers
David Wright
a wisteria cutting
faded between the pages
Michael Dylan Welch