Bundled Up, Volume 1:
Quintains, Pentastichs, Tankas
Cinquains, Quintets, Quintillas
Gogyohkas, Limericks, Wakas
Five Line Poems

 

Turning Left on Quintain Lane

By Mike Garofalo

 

999+ Quintains, Pentastichs, Tankas
              (5 Line Poems)
                    Quintains Research

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1.

We sat in the shade

 

2.

my zazen was writing
pencil in hand—
sitting still for minutes
    no special breathing
      just moving my hand

 

3.

Yes, I wish Milton's Heavenly Muse
would dictate beautiful poetry to me.
But, unfortunately,
She never appeared, you see,
leaving me, seriously, with
the only Muse I hear—Me!

The Gushen Grove Sonnets

 

4.

Opened the Gateless Gate,
     the creaking hinges sang,
a narrow passage opened;
     I saw a iron Temple Bell
rarely ever rung.

Zen Poetry

 

 

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

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Poems 100-199
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Poems 900-1,000
Quintains Research

 

5.

I'm a poet
of a body, not
a poet
of a soul, yes
I sing solo.

 

6.

One Picture of Me


This bony skull of mine
electrified
pictured onscreen for me.
     Doctor recommends
     some oral surgery.

The brain disappeared,
an empty space
sliced from
X Ray images retraced.
Eyeless in inner space.

Monkey nose holes,
bony eye glasses,
teeth glowing in the dark.
     Inner spaces never seen
     underneath my very being.

Skinless, noseless, earless,
a shape, a form—
     the images informed.
Stripping away the unneeded,
revealing my inner core.

 

7.

in-breath
out-breath
unconsciously
enables me
to Consciously Be

 

8.

Emily D. said she Knew Poetry
when her sober "head top
was suddenly taken off."
Wow! Complex tight Poetry
from the Topless Emily D.

Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
American poet.

 

9.

Laugh at the dying of the Light
Embrace the Uncertain Night
Useless to Rage and Rage
Boozing your guts away
Rather Face the depressing day.

Dylan Thomas (1914-1953),
Irish poet and author.

 

10.

Hegel touted secular spirituality
Carlyle cheered rising unbelief
Neo-Pagan myths and rites appeared
Christian motifs shook and swayed
Later, Buddhists answered with the
     No Mind Way.

Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881),
author, historian, essayist, poet;
Sartor Resartus.

 

11.

The Dalai Lama opened the door
making Love, Helpfulness, Decency
the Essence of the Religious Core;
Not beliefs, not creeds, not lore
not arguments; show Kindness.

Dalai Lama (1935-)
author, Tibetan Buddhist leader,
world renowned spiritual guide.

Buddhism

 

12.

my tired eyes
closed—
     memories slowed
     dreams flowed
          time dozed

 

13.

he walks alone
he carries a fossil bone
he cries about his wife who died
he whispers prayers into the fog
he slaps his cane against stone walls

 

14.

Broken Down

My great nephew,
Joshua Loya his name,
a troubled, sick, tired man;
We tried to help him and failed.
A soul free of conventionality.

He was a homeboy styler
a skinny fellow
dressed in baggy pants.
Hanging out with cholos
for a fine machismo time.

His mom died when he was 10
he never recovered!
From auto accidents and hepatitis
and fun drug usage most days;
he slowly slipped from us away.

He lived with us for a year
a lazy fellow
straight F's in high school,
some thieves and stoners for friends.
Still, we wished him well to the end.

My son and we tried to help
Joshua when down
and others did contribute,
to bring him better around
but his failures ground him down.

He phoned every so often
babbling and rude
wandering in a broken brain;
His long letters, indecipherable,
but with artistic Tagger displays.

He lived in County jails
for petty crimes
and old half-way houses
time after time after time.
In garages of friends sometimes.

He called his Aunt Blanche.
He was homeless again
hoping for help from friends.
Sadly, he was sick again.
He wished her well at the end.

    Yesterday, Josh's sister said,
    a sheriff told her:
Josh was shot dead!

    They found his slumped body
    on bloody asphalt
    in a City of Industry
    vacant parking lot.
Bullets through his broken heart!


(Josh Loya: 6/1980-10/6/2024)

 

15.

Pruning bonsai with keen eyes
carefully cutting
for structure and size;
Visions in the artist's mind
Coaxing beauty by his design.

 

16.

The day dribbled to buzzer's end
but ties are forbidden
so overtime dramas begin;
Or, just drop lose or win
Letting wu wei begin.

Ripening Peaches
Taoist Studies and Practices

 

17.

Life is a problem
    without One solution;
not a theorem, not a catechism.
    A challenge, not The Answer!
A restitution of creative innovations.

 

18.

        Making your poetry:
          Make it New, Make it Strange,
     Make it Now, Make it Yours,
           Make it Better, Make it True.
     Make it Reveal, Make it Change.

 

19.

The silence of decades dead
echo endlessly
in every muscle and vein...
Her kisses are remembered
by my tender love lips.

 

20.

My vein is the literal
not the symbolic,
fantastic, abstract, free;
Lost in meaninglessness,
too clever for me.

 

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21.

Liminal spheres
between Selves—
        opening up
    closing bad habits
redesigning oneself.

How to Live a Good Life

 

22.

Bookstore Dilemma

Barnes and Noble
bookstore browsed—
        the smell of new books
    and coffee brewed,
tasty poetry books to peruse.

Poetry books
        on fifteen shelves:
which one? which one?
My wallet wants to force a choice:
    just one! just one!

Louise Glück or Sylvia Plath
    which one? which one?
Hungry to meet and hear them speak;
    [ignoring my wallet]
        I Bought them Both!
Books are alive and talk repeatedly.

Reading Sylvia Plath

 

23.

She shouted and honked
Road Rage beyond reason
Loosing control, pissed off
Cussing, fuming, Over the top;
Then God told her to stop.

 

24.

"What do you Love?" he asked
"Waking up today!"
she said with gusto keen.
Gave herself an insulin shot,
nursed her sugary wounds.

 

25. Old Age

Being 79 is fine
but still running out of time;
so I cope lest
I read less and slower
or think past nowhere.

Reaching 80 soon
four good seasons slowly loom
passing quietly too;
"Don't waste one minute now"
Uranium can't buy any time.

Aging Well

 

26.

December fogs—
among the rotting brown leaves
a squashed dead frog;
    Winter is a Brutal King
    freezing beings one by one.

Wintertime Haiku and Tercets

 

27.

Keep it short, concise, precise
Don't be wordy, verbose, to wide
Keep it focused, on target, aimed
Don't wander, delay, no silly play...
Sadly, a poem imprisoned by Brevity.

 

28.

to my harmonica:
every color is silver
every note is sharp
every lip is luscious
every player a lark

Harmonica Playing

 

29.

I meditated often
hour by hour—
watching tiny juncos
listening to firs swaying
waiting at Nothing's Door.

 

30.

Comfortable outside my skin
While embracing a world within
Both In and Out are One
Undivided as seasons and sun...
Illusions of separateness done.

 

31.

my dog, Bruno, lifted my spirits
living with me
We were Buddies, Dog and man.
      Bruno got cancer and He died,
      i walked alone and i sighed.

 

32.

At dusk the winds picked up
shaking the tent,
snow fell from dark cold skies;
we bundled up warm inside
and played chess passing time.

 

33.

I will be gone someday
      never returning
to walk or play.
Signed my Last Will to say
to whom my possessions are given away.

Coming in
let me nourish
      like rain on a garden.
Going out
let me disappear
      like geese going south.

 

34.

Listening to Change

I listened to another say
what I resisted to hear
what was alien to me
what outlined my ire
what I wanted to fight

But then I settled down
loosened my blockhead mind

Thought things over patiently,
listened more carefully,
saw matters from other sides,
respected the integrity
and sincerity of other kinds

Of thinking outside my closed boxes
Of my habits of opinions needing overhaul.

- Mike Garofalo

Gushen Grove Sonnets

Quintain Sonnet Forms

 

35.

Lamenting his obscure lines,
lack of specificity—
feeling stupid, locked out;
can't fault the reader,
the poet is a mediocre mouse.

 

36.

Junior Varsity soccer game
22 boys hustling at play
sweating this April day
perfect passes on the way...
Referee's whistle— Stop!

 

37.

crawling under the house
sewer pipe broke
puddles of stinking crap...
fixing, reconnecting, glued;
spreading sand on the smell.

 

38.

Longing
    for learning
        to make others
            surprised
                by my words
Trying
    to find
        the perfect rhyme
            and symbolic metaphors
                offered in lines
Seeking
    the insightful words
        and clarity;
            that is the goal
            ahead for me.

 

39.

He was there
    at first-hand;
hiding inferences
resisting interpretations—
    not being second-hand.

 

40.

String between my hands
     with fingers weaving
Figures and shapes appealing
     to children and parents
At my String Figures Art Show.

String Figures and Games

 

41.

Blinded by the obvious
he often forgot
to sink heavy anchors;
ideas swaying to songs
floating aimlessly along.

 

42.

His conclusions were dignified,
and elaborate, but wrong in the end,
aimed well but missing the mark,
his answers did not light up the dark,
not even well-said, said Professor Rend.

 

43.

Roethke in Seattle

Uplifted and impressed
reading Roethke's
Northwest sketches fine.
Birds flew off the page.
Lizards sunned in his lines.

U-Dub students studied
Roethke's methods
for years closely aligned
walking together the Far Fields
with many creative minds.

Roethke's soaked in hot tubs
his sweat refined
lulled into organic bliss—
      laughing in the fog
      languishing like a dog.

He lingered by the rivers
topping Puget Sound
listening to beauty;
stepping into forests
around Seattle Town.

[Theodore Roethke (1908-1963)
poet, teacher.]

 

44.

Leafless Trees of February

 

February sculptures
of leafless trees—
      emptiness on display.
Gray-brown branches and twigs
embraced in Winter's Arms.

fog crawled into branches
of leafless trees—
      invisible leaves.
A sweet gum murmured low
a soft lullaby to the snow.

The trunks and branches
of shrubs and trees—
      unabashed exhibitionists.
Buff nude bodies exposed,
careless, free, willingly.

Morning opened in sunshine
brilliant crisp blue.
Twisted branches knew
Spring is coming soon.
Leafing, leaves, renewed.

Wintertime Haiku and Tercets

 

45.

He kept his secret like a shark his fins,
close to his heart like a pacemaker's wires;
proud of his reticence, not showing his hand,
keeping it close to his vest like Charlie Chan
not spilling the beans until the final scene.

 

46.

Tried to build my Muscles
of Intentions
to strengthen my Will;
     tear the muscles a little
     if you want to build.

 

47.

Planted a climbing rose
to tie to a fence—
     optimistic gardeners
     endlessly puttering
     sworn to thinking ahead.

 

48.

His walker wobbled looser
the sick man fell—
cancer is serious hell.
I helped him stand and walk,
thinking of myself in his lot.

 

49.

Hiding in the Junipers

 

Three ladybugs sit so
cozy together—
the junipers don't really care
who sits here or who sits there
just clean the mites off their hairs.

Shiny orange shimmering shells
black etched eyes—
crawling silently
hiding from enemies
ladybugs jump and fly

Ladybugs by another crisp name
Coccinella novemnotata
five thousand species of Coccinella
mostly farmer's friends
who live just two short years.

Ladybugs can't all be Ladies—
otherwise
there would be fewer surprises
sans some randy
Guybug's pickup lines

 

50.

Drifting to My Mind's Edge

 

The drifting pebbles
slid on the sandy shore
up to me;
my thoughts drifted
outside my mind.

Boy's flying stunt kites
in flying dives and figure 8's
wind at their backs;
our sand castle
remodeled by in-coming waves.

Hot sun and sand burnt
bare fee walking
away from the sea;
grabbing my shoes
touching my toes tenderly.

Black mussels cling to stones
eating in high tide zones
hundreds huddling;
I stumbled hungry
in surf up to my knees.

Only beach grasses
uncontrollable
can live on the dunes;
my thoughts zoomed
hypo-mania loomed.

Summertime Haiku and Tercets

Highway 101 and 1

 

 

Bundled Up:
Quintains and Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

51.

        subtle hints
    of availability—
Tempting me
    to taste
        her skin

 

52.

Daylight drifting in time
absorbing like a damp sponge
     all our intentions, our
          workday efforts to become
somebody, someone, some way.

 

53.

A whole Billy Collins poem
equal to the sum of its parts.
A whole John Ashbery poem
greater than the sum of its parts.
    And both their parts
    have become part of me.
Only the ‘parts’ really matter.

 

54.

Is it a poem or a telephone call?
A 'phrasemakers panache'
or shouts down the hall?
A profound insight or song at a bar?
Ask Frank O'Hara about the Blue Guitar.

 

55.

Tired but not sleeping
awake—
stretched out on the floor
wearing worries weighing me down
into the depths of Insomnia's Sea.

 

56.

Time waits patiently for all.
Tiger hiding
in a blind, eying Us—
Our clocks ticktocked,
The Tiger of Death Leapt.

Pulling Onions:
Over 1,043 One-Liners
Quips, Epigrams, Jokes

 

57.

    alone
on the trail
    steep switchbacks
ahead—
    my autobiography

 

58.

they bashed in her windows
with a bat:
vandals chose her car
for no reason whatsoever
but delight in destruction

 

59.

On the Vernal Equinox,
staring at the calm sea;
Mallard ducks,
peck the grassy ground.
Drizzle coming down.

Springtime Haiku and Tercets

 

60.

wasting away
cancer's curse—
can't stand now
wobbly legs
pain cried today

 

61.

Woman: making dinner stew
Man: working hard
Children: playing games in yard
Family: growing older further
Life: Uncertain At Large

 

62.

Arts of Colored Lights

Paso Robles nights—
"A Sensorio Field of Lights"
filling the dark with colored lights
mazes of colors subtle
dazzled by a flipped switch.



Shore Acres Park
Christmas art—
garden lights
flashing empty flower beds
dispelling darker thoughts

Monterey's hip shops
decorated—
Santa Claus is back
colored bulbs bright
gifts galore in sight

Cape Kiwanda dunes
July 4th—
fireworks flared
colors galore
my eyeballs gorged

Skagit Valley tulips
springtime blooms
tourists flock
like bees to flowers
sweet treats for hours.

At the Edges of the West
Highway 101 and 1

 

63.

Larger than the longest
short by seconds—
can't measure Infinity
slipped into a Black Hole
the speed of light is too slow.

 

64.

     Befuddled by
a poet's words—
     repeating rereads
increased the blur.
     No pearl in the oyster.

 

65.

     Tilted head
floppy arm—
longstanding guards
in fields and farms;
     scarecrow alarmed.

 

66.

Rising expectations undercut
friendships faltering;
     disagreed to agree
     end clearly seen
no future for you and me.

 

67.

Turned Off the TV
     empty screen;
lost time remained
     stuck in my brain
wasted days, hours decayed.

- Consumerist Identites

 

68.

Shirofugen cherry trees blossoming,
Clark College campus colors
whites and pinks astound!
          Sakura Festival music
     in the April sunshine.

 

69.

Is Mu Dark Matter?
Is Light Speed Time?
     Is Gravity a Ball of Strings?
Is a Mind a Body-Brain?
Questioning, wondering, ideas rain.

 

70.

The oak tree in the courtyard
sheltered many a thought.
     Better than hissing "Mu";
     Nothingness shouted.
Profound silences of Emptiness.

 

71.

The Wind swept East away
West was cleared of Gray
The Sun split Skies to Blue
Bright gleaming green Yews
Hard Cold! Smell of Firs...

 

72.

The noun asked the adjective,
"Why do you speak of superficialities?"
    The adjective replied,
"Because your not very interesting
as a mere noun, unqualified."

 

73.

another life on paper
words aligned;
     crossing metaphors
     images sketched so fine,
tidbits spilling onto lines

 

74.

Two different views—
    contradictory ideas
    clashing tastes;
cooked in an artful balance,
steeped in irony.

 

75.

Hammering roofers
     step gingerly ...
dusty boots
     slippery slant—
Two stories to the ground.

 

76.

Streaming energies
from the expanding
     infinite edges
beyond billions
     of galaxies. Beauty

Driven dusts of Time
Essence of our DNA, Yes
     Of star dust we are made.
Hydrogen-oxygen our blood,
     Our gods are understood.

 

77.

Listening to Jazz
Dave Brubeck Quartet—
     Carnegie Hall
     Blue Rondo a la Turk,
Take Five with four guys.

 

78.

washer spinning dry:
pants and shirts
socks and skirts—
     electricity at work
     chores not shirked

 

79.

"Not a second to waste"
was a lie—
     workaholics disagreed
trapped by a pernicious OCD.
Mystics use seconds otherwise.

 

80.

     fewer painful
confessionals to share—
secretive
     closed
unpacked dirty underwear

 

81.

Crawling on my knees:
     pulling weeds
     planting bulbs
     pruning stems...
Wives like such deeds!

 

82.

The tangled hair of Akiko,
the sad toys of Takuboku,
the penny world of Sanford—
     Japanese poets succeed
sowing clever seeds of imagery.

 

83.

my young son visits us
for a few weeks—
     boxes of medicines
          piled high
failed kidney dialysis time

 

84.

Father Priest
     and I
standing seriously at
     my dying father's bedside.
Last Rites Sacrament time!

 

85.

David Attenborough's words
Al Gore's lines
          we did not listen—
     plasticizing our dying world
denying Ozone Holes in the sky.

 

86.

Homophobes and racists
sadly multiply—
     underlying hostilities,
inner repulsions unjustified.
     Wasted energies and lies.

 

87.

Covered in clothes and throws,
Coldest night in February.
     Shivering in Shore Acres,
a canvas yurt in which to hide.
     Bitter cold seldom lies.

Wintertime Haiku and Tercets

 

88.

First time talking to psychologist,
[revealing some .. hiding some]
seeking something not known;
     but optimistic nonetheless
I won't regress from being my best.

 

89.

"When does God sleep?"
asked the child;
    Jesus answered
with a smile:
"Nunca oí a Dios roncar."

 

90.

The Zen archer's bow becomes
One with the Universe.
     Despite aiming carefully,
breathing properly,
he missed the target anyway.

Zen Poetry

 

91.

Why am I Here
Rather than Elsewhere?
Stop questioning
     this or that.
Be Here, take off your hat.

 

92.

The bloodless sea—
     painted red tides
gathered triple toxins
spewed wavy purple streaks
on bays and beaches we see

The bloodless sea—
picturing crashing white waves
bulldozing the thick brown sand
reshaping the shorelines destiny
relentlessly, impulsively, creatively

The bloodless sea—
written about by poets for centuries
     rudely calling my bluff
challenging me aggressively
pushing me past my petty me

 

93.

Walking
sand in my shoes
     beachcomber blues.
Low tide flotsam line
shattered clam shells my Finds.

 

94.

Spiritually, the skeptic in me,
Is not very religious, conventionally;
But the ebullience of nature mystics
Is often very inspiring to me.
     Silence, poetry, and music
    are Forms of Spirituality.

 

95.

quite dogmatically gray
these rain clouds arrayed
these last days of March
     heavy rains today
on the first Spring day

Wintertime Haiku and Tercets

 

96.

     Fell asleep on the floor.
She covered me as I snored:
    turned off the lights
    closed all the doors
while I just snored and snored.

 

97.

She was quite talented
     I will agree.
She managed to win
prizes and trophies.
Yet, when losses came
     she remained unchanged
using her clever coping brain.

 

98.

Living on the edge of destiny
precariously. What can I be?
Answering: What do I want to be?
What must I Give Up
to really be me?

 

99.

     three
     men
cleaning a Indiana
power plant smokestack.
     All Suffocated!

 

 

 

 

100.

The Self sometimes lost,
ego-less disconnected eye-balls;
     lost individualities, hidden me,
immersed in Nature's neutrality
silent awe of Beauty Being.

 

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

Poems 1-99
Poems 100-199
Poems 200-299
Poems 300-399
Poems 400-499
Poems 500-599
Poems 600-699
Poems 700-799
Poems 800-899
Poems 900-1,000
Quintains Research

 

 

Green Way Blog

 

101.

my mom died
one April day—
before her hospice end
     she brushed her teeth
in a satisfied way

 

102.

Life's not a bowl of cherries,
    Nor a bed of roses.
Nor a dream within a Dream
     of a tired black butterfly
Sleeping on a laurel's leaves.

Cuttings: Haiku

 

103.

The sea made clouds,
Clouds birthed rain.
Falling on the sea again
     recycling itself—
          an Endless Chain.

 

104.

I returned to the Bandon cliffs
     year after year.
To savor art works
Carved into the sands
     then Erased by the Surf.

Highway 101 and 1: Docu-Poem

 

105.

The elderly man
hustled fast, but
     pissed in his pants—
his damn zipper stuck,
     he laughed.

 

106.

Why is there nothing
     rather than something?
The hungry sage pondered—
     his rice bowl empty,
          weak tea in his cup.

 

107.

At dawn the birds began to
chirp, hoot, tweet, schreek,
Crows squaked, a dove cooed—
the splashing surf droned on and on,
I slurped some coffee down.

 

108.

Thunderbirds born before the Dawn
     of lost human history—
Knew the Orcas in the Puget Sound,
Knew the Chelais River Salmon,
     Nested on Mt. Tacoma-Ranier's
          steep white glacial slopes.

 

109.

The stories told, perhaps centuries old,
Crawled up my skin, rather fairness thin,
Called revenge justified, against a killer's lies,
Skinwalker's son smiled; his father feared.
The Avenging Angel,

Cuts lives at an angle,
Appears then disappears,
Settling accounts in arrears,
     Knocks on the door,
Of the rich and the poor,

Shows the Warrant
     No matter how abhorrent.
          Settles the score,
Escorts you out the door
     to stand before
Judge Skinwalker's Court.

 

110.

gathering
fishing gear—
     worms in the street
after the rain
          free bait

 

111.

     Palestinian terrorists
attacked viciously.
     Israel then responded
viciously—
     Revenge Insanities.

 

112.

Boring lecture
     far too long—
Doodling abstract
pencil art; thankfully,
     the ending bell sounds

 

113.

limping lady
laughs
heartily—
     listening
to radio jokes

 

114.

she did not
speak
did not cry
closed her eyes
quietly died

 

115.

Jacaranda seeds
brown and hard—
Toys for boys
     in our front home's
     Cout's Avenue yard.

 

116.

I turned around,
heard a bang!
     Bullet missed
     by an inch!
Hole in the wall.

 

117.

Kitchen Circa 1951

no freezer
no frozen food—
     bland canned
corn and beans
     no ice cream

 

118.

Whittier Blvd.
butcher shop—
     axed turkeys
          flopping about
sawdust floors

 

119.

Wet pier boards
clomped under our boots
docked boats shined
    we forgot what we left behind
    fishing consumed our minds.

 

120.

Big Sagebrush
twisted limbs—
    scabbard lands
    basalt cliffs
        rain on the wind

- Potholes Sate Park, WA

 

121.

I ran the mile in track
sweated and struggled
often finished dead last;
Cantwell High School track
still in my legs today.

 

122.

Bodhisattva Jizo or
Saint Christopher both
protect travelers from harm;
    if travelers recite Sutras
    or wear metal charms.

 

123.

Tomorrow means
    nothing to some
living now, for Today;
    but the Past is Present,
seldom unhitched or ignored.

 

124.

Contemplate-investigate
the Here-in-Now—
    voices of trees
    shadows of bees
        incense burned down

 

125.

Blessings of being
Alive—
    Intensity of Beauty,
    Clarity of Truth,
Precious Time!

 

126.

Things birth ideas
Ideas discover things—
    Is Spring an idea?
    Are atoms things?
Poet's ponder such "Things."

 

127.

Watering dry flower beds
chilly April morn—
maple leafing
red Rhododendrons blooming
my fingers stiff and cold

 

128.

Stuck
in a poetry rut—
    spinning ideas
        muddy words...
Louise Glück gave me a tow.

 

129.

    beer
guzzled
        down—
chatty
clown

 

130.

"good morning
hello
have a good day"—
    walkers
nod and say

 

131.

    Opening her letter
again—
creative sketches
    subtle words...
Why did she lie?

 

132.

    Koan answers?
Three pounds of cannabis
Plum trees in the courtyard
Sounds of four hands clapping—
Shape the bonsai, carry the sake.

 

133.

"My daily activities are not unusual,
I'm just naturally in harmony with them.
Grasping nothing, discarding nothing...
Supernatural power and marvelous activity
Drawing water and carrying firewood.

Layman Pang (740-808)

Zen Poetry

 

134.

Nemesis Club Soccer Team
2025

Girls soccer game
rough today—
    two Red Cards
    four injuries
parents Scream...

Playing soccer
    in the rain—
spectators insane...
    Referee
        stops the game!

Slippery grass
cold rain—
        away game
Salem's way
    umbrellas sway

 

135.

My grand daughters
    17th birthday
today—
    17th of April.
Auspicious coincidences?

 

136.

A best friend,
her cousin,
    died today—
total surprise,
healthy till 85.

 

137.

Two roads
crossed—
four way stop!
    My engine died
    travel stopped!

 

138.

Played the game
placed the wager
tossed the dice
won the bet—
    left Vegas lucky sane

 

139.

Symbols shine
    in metaphor time
        aligning the mind—
The Flowers of Evil
in Baudelaire's lines.

 

140.

        homely boy
        worries—
unpopular
shunned
ugliness sucks

 

141.

Green olives stuffed with garlic
tasted fine
blended with fresh French bread—
we watched the boats in the river
while slowly sipping fine Pinot Noir.

 

142.

Hohner
    harmonica
Low C—
    blow-suck
sonorous melodies

 

143.

Alan Watts
made me laugh—
philosophical humor
        bundled
    Insights

 

144.

geese formations
flying by
cacophony of honking
moving
sky

 

145.

cut my hand
cutting wood
can't see so well
can't be as strong—
        lost youth

 

146.

In Gushen Grove
the Valley Spirit
never dies—
    Lao Tzu
    opened his eyes.

 

147.

homeless beggar
    handed $20—
he held
a cardboard sign:
    Matthew 5-7

 

148.

the bathroom mirror
fogged—
I could not
    recognize
        my wet face

 

149.

The School buses loading
stop and go.
Red stop lights flashing,
yellow caution lights blinking slow.
I stop, wait, and watch the show.

 

150.

Winter killed, spring revives,
ferns recover, tulips rise,
dogs bark, crows skwack-cawk;
I read a Gioia poem out loud.

 

151.

my coffee cup
    receiving
        falling
wisteria blooms—
lavender creamer

Springtime Haiku and Tercets

 

152.

    sitting on sand
gazing at the
Cannon Beach scene—
        sneezing into
    my sandy hand

Highway 101 and 1: A Docu-Poem

 

153.

eating a bowl
of steaming rice—
        pure white
    pleasures
bite by bite

 

Bundled Up:
Quintains and Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

154.

Departing, step by step;
step by step, arriving.
        Sitting down
    boots off
feet sore.

 

155.

The best things in life are more expensive than you think.
Artists rearrange new objects and intellectuals rearrange old words.
To put a bigger hat on an idea: Capitalize its Key Words.
Sitting in a garden and doing nothing is high art everywhere.
Maybe it is a Bright (blue, green, yellow) Enigma
rather that a Dark (black, brown, red) Enigma?
Metaphors are a delightful, tricky, clever, ingenious ways of
pumping iron with words.

Pulling Onions:
Over 1,043 One-Liners
Quips, Epigrams, Jokes

 

156.

We pulled up a crab cage
from the old Toke dock
filled with five small crabs;
no keepers in this fifth pull,
a stingy bay here today.

Four Days in Grayland

 

157.

I turned right onto old
Highway 101
headed south to Olympia.
Sashaying along the Hood Canal
      Oysters at every curve.

Highway 101: Docu-Poem

 

158.

Feeling my age these April days
From work in our bursting garden;
Clean up chores so long delayed
During Winter's lazy indoor pardon.
Took a nap. Dreamt about dahlias.

The Spirit of Gardening

 

159.

morning walk
alone—
    rehearsing
a memorized
    poem

 

160.

Since
my friend
is gone—
    life
        goes on

 

161.

Plum flowers
in the sky—
        sensory
        actualities;
Noumena left unspecified.

Flowers in the Sky
By Mike Garofalo
Reference: Master Dogen's Kuge

 

I really appreciate positive feedback,
reviews, kudos, and encouragement
about the value of my free webpages.
Send your comments to:
Text Press Email

 

162.

skinned shins
bleed—
            kneeling
        pulling
    weeds

 

163.

Climbing in the rain
    up a sand dune slope
in quiet Nehalem Bay—
    reaching the Top
of Beauty at the Sea.

 

164.

slanted sun rays
strike
pink cherry blossoms—
    parking lot
        cars shine

 

165.

    closed down
not open now
nobody within our sight
glass door locked tight till
    later tonight

 

166.

Bach's cello
compositions on
my cellphone MP3s,
complexities of pleasures fill
my ears.

 

167.

brown leaves
dead trees
damn drought—
helpless ground in
San Joaquin

- Highway 99 and I5: Docu-Poem

 

168.

I wrote these poems
myself—
    not stolen
    by machine AI
selling semi-plagiarized lies

 

169.

There are no ads on these pages.
    Are you surprised?
Makes my webpages more dignified.
Don't need AI to sell for me.
Just offering some so-so poetry.

 

170.

we were
off the same page
so we stopped and talked
strategized and calmly agreed
with her

 

171.

move on
from garden chores
double digging more and more
hour after hours dry dust overturned
work done

 

172.

The still lake was green
from cyanotoxins algae,
scum floating to the shore,
harmful filth to the core;
everyone leaves the ugly scene.

The Wreck Ahead Comes Into View

 

173.

the basalt cliff rocks tattooed
red with graffiti
of forgotten first names enshrined
placards of insignificance
faded colors of little minds

 

174.

my money
root of hustling
common source of pride
only good for something nice for
my honey

 

175.

Three beer cans tossed in the gutter
epitome of the virtue of selfishness
shining examples of ugly clutter
clones of lazy boozer's discontents
symbols of careless abandonment.

 

I really appreciate positive feedback,
reviews, kudos, and encouragement
about the value of my free webpages.
Send your comments to:
Text Press Email

 

176.

hours of reading
into midnight—
    cold study room
        bright lights
sleepy eyes

 

177.

blood drips
from plastic tubes
replacing her lost fluids
from the Cuts from the Crash...
she drifts

 

178.

protest marchers
walk today
        rejecting
King Trump's
dictatorial way

 

179.

Bible belt
buckled up for Trump.
    Nazi belt emblem
        Gott mit uns.
White worship.

 

180.

tears of pride
yells of joy
champions cheer—
    loosing team
        silently goes

 

181.

He died
then revived—
    tunnels of light
stigmatic hands
    Shaman's plan

 

182.

Standing meditation
    bores me—
I'm prone to ADD
    easily distracted
wobbly Roots under me

 

183.

    telltale signs
        of miseries—
cold homeless camp
stale scraps of chips
    begging in the rain

 

184.

Patiently
waiting in line
for my appointed time,
along with other old men in
urology.

 

185.

Of night, or moon, or naught
of shadows tangled in knots
of dull dreams remembered not
of a sad song sung a lot...
rambling rhythms sway and rock.

 

186.

Five T-shirts all said in red
"Trump is God"—
The five enjoyed the Disneyland rides
pleased that Pope Francis had just died.
Lucifer's faithful on parade.

 

187.

Emily D. loved the em dash—
—not a macron or en dash—
to signal shifts of her mind—
—to highlight a verse's charm—
to strengthen or stop a line—

"First—Chill—then Stupor—
—then things letting go—" ED

 

188.

he ran
as fast as he can—
    finished last in the race
proving his manly tenacity,
        nobody clapped

 

189.

e.
    e.
        cummings
Typ0
Graph Ical
            Obsc
        UR
    Ities

 

190.

        spiders weave webs
    we weave words
skylarks sing
    poets pen odes—
        meanings unfold

 

191.

fashion power
restrain power—
a balancing act
    to create great art
        controlled and smart

 

192.

He had the courage
to say:
    I'm not going to be
    the center of the rest
        of my life."

 

193.

time has a rhythm
beyond ticktock—
    a string quartet waltz
    a dying walker's walk
    a stewing pot

 

194.

sleepless in pajamas
awake with worries—
        mind buzzing
ideas racing...
            moonless night

 

195.

Thoughts as
real as rocks—
        piled up stones
    ideas stocked:
quartz and fools-gold.

 

196.

            Not Forcing
        going with the flow
finding the groove
being Cool—
    Taoist roles.

 

197.

    Where are the bees?
Why have they died?
    Without Them
plant life will disappear
and animals/humans will die.

Pesticides increase production
for awhile while
profits for corporations rise;
    imported grapes and avocados
        out of season
this worlds awry.

 

198.

thinking about thinking
can be useful
    as a rule—
too much just thinking
creates clever lazy fools

 

199.

The world has sadly been
Americanized—
        leaving junk
    piled high
polluting the earth and sky.

The Wreck Ahead Comes Into View

 

 

 

200.

This world projects me
emanates, creates, grows me
births me, radiates me, plays me—
yet needs me to see,
It is Not about illusions of me.

 

Bundled Up:
Quintains, Pentastichs, Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

Poems 1-99
Poems 100-199
Poems 200-299
Poems 300-399
Poems 400-499
Poems 500-599
Poems 600-699
Poems 700-799
Poems 800-899
Poems 900-1,000
Quintains Research

 

201.

There is no Boss of Nature
No King of the Universe
No Ruler over all—
    Just Happenings of Itself,
        just so, it is just so.

 

202.

My body is not
    a horse I ride;
not a Brother Ass
    I work till it dies.
St. Francis lied.

 

203.

    Learning how
        to let go—
participate,
don't dominate,
enjoy life's show.

 

204.

religions mostly
define sex as sin,
    immorality,
    a pest—
Nature laughs

Cuttings: Haiku

 

205.

Your mind can be
like a mirror—
keeping you distant
    from intimacy...
        touchless unreality.

 

206.

fat radishes
red and round
seasonal shifts
vegetable prices
coming down

 

207.

My balance unravels
    if I turn to quick;
my age is 80,
    what the shit;
I'm amazed
    that I still exist.

 

208.

poet's confess—
    loneliness
loss of love
    distress
words of regrets

 

209.

She passed
the pipe—
    cannabis
    fine,
I declined.

 

210.

walked
an hour—
    dogs barked
birds fled
    azaleas red

 

211.

tired
sleepy—
    gas
    tank
        empty

 

212.

dead bird
in the gutter—
street sweeper
    coming
        distant roar

 

213.

    thinking
about thinking's themes;
Not thinking about Not-Thinking
[what can that really mean?]
    "thinking"

 

214.

        only
a cloud of gnats
circling the dirty birdbath
inviting the midges who are
        lonely

 

215.

    napped
three times today
aching body led the way
fatigued from stress and overwork
    zapped

 

216.

"The pattern seemed to be different now.
Sebastian finished the astringent tea.
"Like myself," he said, "this is getting
Nowhere," and went back to the house
To a book he had turned down."

[Kenneth Rexroth, The Homestead
Called Damascus
, 1925.]

 

217.

Contesting Poets

She entered a poetry Contest
for a $1,500 prize,
    1,100 other poets
also tried and applied,
sending their two best poems via online.

Judging poetry
is hardly any fun
while reading
2,200+ poems
    piled one on one.

To be
The One of 1,100
who got the coveted prize—
    Lady Luck was
        clearly on her side.

But don't be discouraged
by the ridiculous odds;
    pay the $15.00
entrance fee
and toss the dice of poetry.

If you don't gamble
you can't win; or,
just keep your fifteen bucks
    to spend
        on some other sin.

 

The American poet
with the most prizes,
awards, grants, citations:
    John Ashbery!
[A very fine poet to me.
Only lacking a Nobel Prize.]

Or, consider, Anthologies:
Editors/Judges read 18,000 Tankas
for Take Five, Volume 4,
to select 400
"of the very best"...
[The Master's Opinions! Yes?]

 

A poet's
introduction—
[where he was published]...
    far longer than
        the one sonnet
            he read.

Poetry contest winner
reading his long poems—
    listener's yawned,
        then clapped.
            Nobody laughed.

 

[My preferred publishing style]

 

218.

Becoming colder
    I move to the corner
where it was always 90 degrees—
laughing loudly
    the riddle sneezed.

727 Riddles, Jokes, Brain Teasers

 

219.

aches
and pains today
reminded me—
    buck up buddy
    fight life's dis-ease

 

220.

    brushing my teeth
water running
    gargling; suddenly
like a Pavlovian dog,
    the urge to pee

 

221.

In general, be more specific.
Absolutes squirm beneath realities.
Dogmatists are less useful than dogs.
Roundness is the Holy Shape.
The real "miracle" is cause and effect.

Pulling Onions
Over 1,000 Quips
One Liners, Epigrams

 

222.

unseen
unknown
unspecified
unconnected
unborn

 

223.

I watched the old woman
trip and then fall in her yard.
Bashed her lips, bloodied her arm,
    laid still for awhile,
cussing, pissed off, assessing her harm.

 

224.

The stupidest President
elected twice—
defeating two women,
easy prey,
    to be kept in the kitchen
        out of real men's way

he spit words at me,
tipped his red cap,
a bitter MAGA devotee,
        unwilling to tolerate
    anyone but he

listening to myself
complain about Trump—
Am I a glutton
            swallowing
    self-punishment?

 

225.

    the waves
sang
    incessantly—
a mournful dirge
        about the dying sea

 

226.

a cool breeze
caressed
    my skin—
sunbath
this day in May

a single fir needle
    fell on my skin—
I brushed it off,
gently it seemed,
        barely a tiny thing

[May in the Garden Anthology]

 

227.

silence might heal
silence might reveal
silence might conceal—
        hidden mysteries
    drowned by sounds

 

228.

can't touch silence
can't hear colors
can't see sounds—
        my speaking me
    let's words conjure up
        possibilities

 

229.

warm day
sun conspired—
getting me
    to walk outside
despite my lazy mind

 

230.

Poetry contest winner
reading his long poems—
listener's yawned,
        then clapped.
Nobody laughed.

 

231.

    My mother
    used to say
"mind your own business";
so, I try to be focused and stay
    busy my way.

 

232.

I once thought
    life is a riddle,
        Death is a riddle—
    but after wise experiences,
the riddle does not exist.

 

233.

Ethics is not transcended,
no matter what Wittgensten said—
    ethics is feeling
friendship, compassion, helpfulness,
        even dread.

 

234.

One person
    heard the notes.
Another person
    listened to the pauses.
Another the music.

 

235.

Endiku said
"Gilgamesh is given
Powers and Kingship, and
the Courage to Face
    Zarathushtra Incarnate."

 

236.

I hiked to the Top:
Mount Whitney and Mt. Lassen,
Mount San Gorgonio and more—
        but only imagined seeing
     the idea of Mount Analogue.

[René Daumal, Mount Analogue.]

 

237.

Can't see God
            in every
        nook and cranny
    everywhere;
like Meister Eckhart's mind.

 

238.

planted
cream white
Rhododendron
inside a blue pot—
        Watering

 

239.

I imagined two haiku—
        pencil lead broke
        finished none.
Sharpened my pencil;
    forgot what to write.

 

240.

        Walking
alone in the dim
twilight zone—
        wild driver coming,
    I jumped off the road.

 

241.

sweet candies
    tempting me
remembering
me...
—diabetes

 

242.

lichens:
on rocks
on trees
    in the sun
        in the sea

 

243.

Calling
an old friend
to tell her bad news;
a fine colleague of ours
had died—we sighed.

 

244.

The very little boy
at the soccer game fence,
with his back to the crowd,
    unzipped his pants
        and peed.

[everyone smiled]

 

245.

Jetty Stones, rocky levees,
embrace the River
Columbia to the Sea;
Seagulls and noisy geese
shit on the dirt levees.

 

246.

lichens on trees
    lichens on rocks
        lichens on shrubs
            lichens on docks...
humans everywhere

 

247.

Home again home again
    crows in the firs:
squak squak squak squak squak squak
    signals-messages by air
Stellar Jays aware.

 

248.

Petals
open by day
closed by night.
    Cafe open at 7
    closed at 2.

 

249.

    Frosted Flakes
soaked in milk
floating food
    sugarfied
spoonfuls-GREAT!

 

250.

        Repeating
patterns multiplied
multi-layered synthesized—
Metamorphosis by Philip Glass.
        Overlapped...

 

Bundled Up:
Quintains and Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

Green Way Blog

 

251.

Squirrels running
past my chair—
    hummingbird
        hovering
    above my head

 

252.

    reading
post-modern poetry—
        sexually explicit
free verse randomness
        pulsing crazy

 

253.

washing
    my hand
        germs
    soaked
away

 

254.

Cinco de Mayo
celebration—
    nimble dancers
        strut and stride
colorful time

 

255.

    Laying on the floor
pillowed by my arm
    covered by a quilt
pajamas soft and clean—
awake for hours it seemed.

 

256.

Pretending to be me;
such a boring chore.
    Clowning around with
    dull masquerades of me.
Misplaced my fragile identity.

 

257.

old age
"creeps in its petty pace"
day by day—
        slowly dying
    going away

 

258.

I did that
    I did this;
        He showed me that
    She showed me this—
chosen or given makes minds.

 

259.

No Guru talking
to me;
No Master over
me.
    Free to invent me.

 

260.

"For though my rhyme be ragged,
Tattered and jagged,
Rudely rain-beaten,
Rusty and moth-eaten,
If ye take well therewith,
It hath in it some pith."
- John Skelton

 

261.

    Commercials tease,
fake you out,
trick your brain,
sneak and fib—
    your money their aim.

 

262.

    COVID days—
staying at home everyday,
quarantined like everyone,
hoping to avoid the flu's
    morbid way.

 

263.

            sore shin
        red and inflamed spots
    stinging raw
not healing—
remedies saught

 

264.

Wonder:
    buds in Spring
        wedding ring
            vivid dreams
bread and beans

 

265.

going
    coming
leaving
    entering—
long walk home

 

266.

        stuttered
    stopped
lawn mower—
    so pissed
off

 

267.

easily
distressed and
pissed off by little mishaps
that my work plans stop
frequently

 

268.

cell phone
turned off—
        missed
    sales calls
no loss

 

269.

May Day:
        rhododendrons
multi-colored
vibrant displays—
        tints of sunshine

 

270.

        bird
    shit
drops on rocks—
    lichens
        thrive

 

271.

my tire
blew out—
Interstate 5
roadside
ROAR

 

272.

Bandon
in June:
    cranberry
        shops
stocked.

[June in the Garden Anthology]

 

273.

One dreary winter day,
I spotted Big Foot drinking coffee
with Paul Bunyan and Vampire Vlad
in a cozy Tillamook Starbucks Cafe.
Nobody was fazed;
    figuring,
just Hollywoody Cos-Play.

A Fork in the Crypto Road

 

274.

We can't deny Fukushima's tsunami demise,
Our West Coast shares that Ring of Fire Alive.
We shudder and shake in earthquakes strong.
Yes, it can suddenly become horribly wrong.

Where will the tens of millions go?
When Florida's Turkey Point melts down
during a horrendous hurricane blow.

The Wreck Ahead Comes Into View

 

275.

wet grass
a robin hops
digging worms
grubs and such—
"Call of the Wild"

 

277.

Thrice beautiful
are Beauty's Eyes—
            crying over melodies,
        opening wide, seeing bliss,
    closing at midnight time.

 

278.

Took a shower
    my garden chores done
dressed in sweatpants and T shirt—
    read John Ashbery's poetry,
fell asleep between the stanzas.

 

279.

Are my quatrains
worth reading?
I thought—
Not as tasty
as her enchiladas.

 

280.

    Then
it became clear—
        as my vivid dream ends
and my waking mind gently asks,
    "When?"

Then
    one morning in May
    the kitchen sink leaked—
not the best way a Saturday
Began

    Then—
        Mother's Day
cards opened and read
a flower bouquet beside her bed a
    Trend

Then
wondering, on edge,
would the expensive gift given
communicate the message I wanted to
Send

Then,
We drove to the sea—
Found a cozy motel by the shore,
Made acrobatic love for hours with
Bends

Then—
    the End!

 

281.

Packing my bags
for another camping trip—
        medicine bag, wood cane,
    box of food, coat for rain,
clothes for cold, books for my brain.

- Four Days in Grayland

 

282.

Maps studied
for my guides—
        new places
    new finds,
unknowns uncovered.

 

283.

President Carter
died today—
        a Decent man
    All the way.
I ate some peanuts today.

 

284.

NBA games
    every day,
NBA TV
    all the games—
boredom delayed.

 

285.

She grabbed my hand
as the airplane bucked
in a Palm Springs takeoff—
        we both feared
    a plane crash was near.

 

286.

Sitting stopped
in traffic between
Olympia and Tacoma—
        bad accident on I5,
overturned tanker burning.

 

287.

A subtle message
somewhere hidden away:
    obscure metaphors
        striking images
            Obscenities!

 

288.

Envelope Quintain Rhyme Prosody:

A     Always keep an apple
B     By your bed
C     Granny Smith apples green
B     Best for your lazy head
A     As tasty as a Fuji Frapple

 

289.

    4 am
wakening,
staring at the fireplace—
        coffee
        steaming

 

290.

        dulled black
2HB pencil
        sharp blue
ink pen
    words on white paper

 

291.

Our adopted grandsons,
Nerdy Men,
Science Project Winners:
    Growing plants on Mars research,
    Complex programmed video games.

 

292.

cup         slowly     again
of            drank      a
tea          a cup       tea
warm     of             cup
hand      tea           empty

empty
tea
cup
washed
again

clean
tea
cup
shelved
again

Tea
Cup
Empty
in the
End.

 

293.

She’s the Empress of Beans.
He’s the Emperor of Sour Cream.
Their daughter’s the Princess of handmade dreams.
Their son’s the Prince of clever memes.
Or, so Imagination portrays Royalty.

 

294.

My hands felt the salty sea
    my fingers ran
        across the sand...
she hummed a melody,
held her cup of ginger tea.

- Cantos of the Hands

 

295.

I tossed the bait
into the surf
fishing for a silver perch—
        my fingers stiff and cold,
    reeling-reeling in a naked hook.

 

296.

My hand held an agate jewel
carved slick by the tumbler Sea
polished by a million grains of sand—
rock-smooth in my caressing hand,
amazed I was by rocky headlands.

 

297.

I splashed words on the page
like Jackson Pollack's random sprays;
    I laughed and played—
streams of consciousness went dry.
I tossed the scribbles in the trash.

 

298.

garbage trucks
    backing up
beep, beep, beep, beep, beep...
Wednesday morning
    ritual dump

 

299.

A quatrain with
an extra line
is not a Tanka;
     rather 3+2 brief lines,
     without the rhyme.

    

 



 

 

300.

liking this world
    as it is
not easy, occasionally wise
    changes yourself
by little lies

 

Bundled Up:
Quintains, Pentastichs, Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

Poems 1-99
Poems 100-199
Poems 200-299
Poems 300-399
Poems 400-499
Poems 500-599
Poems 600-699
Poems 700-799
Poems 800-899
Poems 900-1,000
Quintains Research

 

301.

Exterminate diversity:
kill the elephants
for piano keys, or slaughter
all rhinos for aphrodisiac greed.
Deny diversity and we will die.

 

302.

RUN fast, slow Down,
SHOUT out, be Quiet,
Spinning CENTERED Ideas—
Reading Michael McClure's
Whirlpool POETICS wash.

["LIFE IS A CURTAIN
draw across the past.
- Michael McClure]

 

303.

Intricate memories
    of traveling—
Ayahuasca brew in Costa Rica,
    in a circle of seekers,
wholly holy transformed.

[Morgan Paige, Blue Morpho]

 

304.

The Littlest Things:
old, worn,
impermanent,
imperfect—
wabi-sabi style.

[The Bottom Line]

 

305.

Lone Ranch Beach black rocks
covered in lichens and seaweed locks
faced the splash of the surf—
    a Sea Scooter crushed
    a mussel in his gizzard.

 

306.

Or, consider, anthologies:
Editors/Judges read 18,000 Tankas
for Take Five, Volume 4,
to select 400
"of the very best"...

 

307.

hand-still-unmoving Death
grabbed his failing breath
shook his ego till it expired
    handed him oblivion
    took from him all desire

 

308.

Ribbons of trickling streams
colorless shards of fog and rain
guided down by the hands of gravity
        to disappear into
    the Mouth of the Sea.

 

309.

            the telling weight
        of the yellow stone
    held in my fist—
memories of riverbanks
    left unmined

 

310.

    splitting wood
    this campfire needs
to light the dawn—
she read sad poetry
he gently cried

 

311.

my fantasies
meant much to me—
never confessed
        embarrassing,
hidden between my legs

 

312.

I buried my dog
big Rowdy the Rottweiler
under a blanket—
    shoveled dirt
        respectfully

 

313.

the wet dog
    smelled of grass;
my damp sweatshirt
soaked from work
    smelled of me

 

314.

my pants
slipped down
my skinny ass—
        fallen suspenders
    a broken clasp

 

315.

the dirty old man
bent and down
        without a smile
    said "God Bless"
and passed me by

 

316.

Trump flags
in trailer town—
don't need no Harvard nerds,
don't like Queers or foreign breeds,
favor American beers and Fox TV.

Trump improvements:
nobody eats dogs
or cats anymore; instead,
the poor eat canned
dog food from the store.

 

317.

reading the thick
Tanka Anthology—
between the lines
    of brevity, many seeds
were planted in me

 

318.

white bird shit
on my bonsai pot—
    a patina of elegant
        naturalness,
I did not wipe it off

 

319.

A fluorescent bulb
fell and bounced—
    then broken glass
spewed smoky
argon, xenon, neon,
mercury and krypton out.

 

320.

Blossoms gone
from cherry trees—
    flying bugs
    bounce off the screen;
Spring a faded memory.

 

321.

my high school
basketball coach
had no right hand—
        an Anzio grenade
    blew it away and
killed another man

 

322.

little lady
thin and prim
beautiful blouse
hair perfectly trimmed—
    I want to kiss her ear

 

323.

Darkness brewed:
              unsettled thoughts
         crowded anxieties
helter-skelter memories
    all dispelled by sleep.

 

324.

walking home
in the dark—
moonlit path
         spooky
    sounds

 

325.

saying
the rosary,
    world peace
sought—
    childish thoughts

 

 

326.

two plus two
equals six—
    she failed
the math quiz
    four times

 

327.

blocked shot
rebound sought
put back in—
    popcorn dropped
    cheering stopped

 

328.

summertime
         swimmers
towel off—
    children grin
in umbrella shade

 

329.

sunny angles
bright and shadows
    half-lit leaves—
obscure memories
         half-hidden dreams

 

330.

In the Port Orford
rain and wind—
              myrtlewood shop
    carved souvenirs
dry indoors.

 

331.

Logging trucks
on Hwy 101—
    passing me
     speeding
to the Aberdeen mills.

 

332.

fast wind
shaking everything—
reading indoors
    don't hear or feel
         cold air streams

 

333.

rat race
ain't bad,
snails pace
ain't bad—
any pace please

 

334.

a keepsake
an ornate shell—
remembering
    my childhood's
         prosaic home

 

335.

my daughter
a grandmother
will be—
my grand daughter
a mother...
    decades flew by

 

336.

    A poet's
    introduction—
longer than
the one tanka
he read.

 

337.

Halloween:
she set
an extra
dinner plate
for hungry
dead friends

 

338.

My grandmother's
     Family Bible—
a big heavy tome
unopened for years
     a dusty history.

 

339.

     Talked with
a Two Spirit man
on a beach in Chinook lands
we laughed and said goodbye,
     did not kiss.

 

340.

Nonna
once
making sauce—
          decades lost
     empty pot.

 

341.

memories
of mom—
playing canasta
on the beach
     blanket hot

 

342.

     For 50 years
we laughed
     we cried—
and still
happily alive.

 

343.

pasta
sauce
bubbling—
     my dead dad's
     recipe

 

344.

the family
we choose
          and the
ones
we inherit

 

345.

dancing
in the dark—
embracing
     silent
          remarks

 

346.

old hurts
can get in the way
of new beginnings—
          my mother
     used to say

 

347.

     The cold dead heart
of practicality—
kept me away
from someone
     I wished to be.

 

348.

      gopher snake
crawls to his hole—
my growling dog
snarling craves
      snake sushi

 

349.

smiling
bidding goodbye—
            carried her
      carry on
out of sight

 

350.

No Rock of Ages
under which to hide
from rain and snow—
the forest cut down
for clapboard homes

 

Bundled Up:
Quintains and Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

351.

The day began
with a BANG—
Mt. Saint Helen's erupted
45 years ago,
melted all the snow.

 

352.

Digging wild carrots
"Yampah, s-luk'um"
Little Fingers—
Oreille River
Spring greens.

 

353.

plucking huckleberries
sucking juice
fingers in our mouth—
humming
"numanumanumanuma"

 

354.

holding tightly
to the ladder's sides
stepping carefully—
unsteady lately
my 80th birthday

 

355.

sand sculptures
in Saint Helens
sit on the shore—
    river will rise
    erasing the art

 

356.

shot in the arm
a bullet of vaccine—
    working on trust
she takes a chance
on a little bit of the disease

 

357.

The store detective
shuts off the alarm—
offender escorted,
paperwork prepared,
elderly thief sits on a chair.

 

358.

Called by the School Principal,
my son in a fight—
defending or offending
the issue at hand,
we wrestle with "facts."

 

359.

evening walk
around my block—
    dogs bark
        squirrels dart
             children talk

 

360.

heartwarming
film
ended—
    we were both
teary-eyed

 

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361.

opening
the book
adjusting
the lamp—
wiping my glasses

 

362.

"Effigies of Indifference"
Idle scarecrows goofing off
Full bellied Rich sleeping it off
Freeway racers cutting people off
Drunken homeboys steal and scoff

Burn them all, buy them off
Deny them any energy
Toss them off the Thomas Bridge
Cheering as they screaming fall

Relics of Responsibility
Hung on sacred olive trees
Cheered by people good and free

 

363.

Streams of incoherence
Rivers of incomprehensibility
Oceans of meaninglessness—
     Occasional glimpses
of fools-gold in the poems.
[Reading Ashbery-Verlaine]

"The idea is to reach the unknown
by the derangement of all the
senses."
- Arthur Rimbaud (1854-1891)

"Let your verse be
aimless chance."
- Paul Verlaine (1844-1896)

[Slouching Towards Incoherence]

 

364.

muddling
my way—
          not understanding
     hardly coping
crippled by ignorance

 

365.

touching
     her hand
gently—
     wedding
vows

 

366.

     tired
sleepy—
     tossing
turning...
     Insomnia

 

367.

old computer
screen
     flickering—
          elderly sick
     pixels

 

368.

Winter yurt camping
at Nehalem Bay
my favorite—
     annoying crowds
     stay far away.

 

369.

Many mosquitoes
on Memorial Day
biting and stinging—
        kept unsafely away
    by poisonous spray.

 

370.

          fallen
     faded
rhododendron blooms—
hot days in
     June

 

371.

Driving by my
old Bandini home—
    it is 80 years old
    as I am today.
Both a bit worn and frayed.

 

372.

            moonbeams
        brighten
    meadow foam
Flowers—
Willamette night

 

373.

the bird
    Crashed
into the window glass—
    flapped for moments
then died

 

374.

Morning...
Arch Rocks,
Spruce trees on the top—
    I sit dazed...
Amazed!

 

 

Highway 101 and 1: A Docu-Poem

 

375.

That I will become
the roots of a tree
bothers me—
preferring to be
a sweet cherry

 

376.

fatigue
leaves me drifting
half-asleep
in my sinking body
motionless

 

377.

Barber's
Adagio for Strings
    transports me—
to the rolling green
Palouse Hills.

 

378.

These hands
    shaking
unintentionally—
    telling me
unpleasant things.

 

379.

Old age:
black bananas
moldy cheese
broken toys
rusted dreams

 

380.

Tempted
to cut my wrists
to end the pain—
    worn out body
    mind mislaid

 

381.

moonbeams
make visible
    shaking leaves
of willow trees—
    June breeze

 

382.

these hands
write on
blue lines—
    Notebook
    guidelines

 

383.

My blue notebook's blue lines
Guide my pencil's trajectory
Space out my words
March them straight in line.
Mysterious marks on white wood.

 

384.

    two squirrels
spinning around the
tree, up and down—
    rituals of
romance

 

385.

I Don't own a Moleskine Notebook;
Sleek, black, hip design, $25.00.
I Own a Top Flight Wired Notebook;
Pack of three for $15.00, good utility.
Filled mine up with thoughts from me.

Traveler's carry their Moleskines
to China, where its made, a
handsome accessory in their hands—
jotting down the names, addresses,
and costs of places they crave to see.

Some folks fill their Moleskines
with drawings and sketches fine,
with diaries from their daily lives,
with notes and lists to organize,
to document their moments lost in time.

- Roland Allen, The Notebook: A
History of Thinking on Paper

 

386.

    Buckets of piss
cured hides for parchment
and pulp rags for paper in 1568—
from 1568 to 1968
writers All needed this: Paper!

 

387.

holding an axe
heavy and sharp—
            showing my
        young son
how to chop

 

388.

conspicuous consumption
parked at the curb—
toys for the rich,
    RVs and trailers
        gathering dust

 

389.

obscure metaphors
    random adjectives
pointless words
    askew verbs—
post-modern gibberish

[Verlaine-Rimbaud,
delighted would be.]

 

390.

    worm in my hand
Wiggling—
returned to the earth
    where It wants to be
Living...

 

391.

A picture of treason
hung on the wall—
    my father tore up
the picture of Buddha,
        not allowed.

 

392.

Catholics and Baptists
new ecumenical friends:
        conspiring to defy
    secular trends—
Christian Nationalism.

 

393.

I've never done
LSD, cocaine, or ludes,
        not my mug of tea—
    ordinary me
is quite satisfactory.

 

394.

green steel
blue sun
orange plums
red seals—
    color-blind nun

 

395.

Piers of silence
        sway in the fog
shaking their legs
   in salt-water taffy.
Fishermen smoked stogies.

 

396.

The birds saw
hiker's parading
down the dusty trails—
    geese flew south
        by invisible trails.

 

397.

Invisible particles
of atomic mass
   infinitesimal weight
   holding immense energy
spinning space

 

398.

Time handed itself
Diaries from the past—
      It remembered, read,
   It recollected, reviewed
It spit out stale old news.

 

399.

Her arithmetic
was faulty,
   but it did
      not matter—
her kisses counted

 

 



400.

          Everybody
     wants Love—
Loneliness
          can Crush
     one's Soul

 

Bundled Up:
Quintains, Pentastichs, Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

Poems 1-99
Poems 100-199
Poems 200-299
Poems 300-399
Poems 400-499
Poems 500-599
Poems 600-699
Poems 700-799
Poems 800-899
Poems 900-1,000
Quintains Research

 

Bundled Up: Volume 2
Quintains 1,000 - 1,500

 

401.

Earthquake rubble
        Bodies buried
Wails of mourners
        City destroyed—
Even Titan's Shocked!

Jolt!!!

 

402.

dead bodies
     rotting
in the rubble—
earthquake sirens
     silent

 

403.

      grief
holds all—
gutting
our guts
     —stalled

 

404.

The Columbine killers
in trench coats black—
      asked victims
"Do you believe in God?"
      then shot themselves.

 

405.

Timothy McVeigh
      killed 168 people
to set an example
of Right Wing Pride;
      then tried to hide.

 

406.

He blew up a
Planned Parenthood Clinic—
      to stop STD prevention,
      to stop birth control,
to control women more.

 

407.

Nagasaki
flash of flames
flattened city—
      burning omen
            of Cold War

 

408.

He killed his wife
with a kitchen knife:
            jury returns,
      judge pounded his gavel,
killer's children cry.

 

409.

Hate
motivates,
greed
gravitates—
the ruthless congregate.

 

410.

I tried to tolerate
his many hates.
   But, he polluted my mind,
   wasted my time;
so I never talked to him again.

 

411.

mushy oatmeal
milk and sugar
stirred gently
tasty treat
breakfast treat

 

412.

      Doing nothing
   erases time—
         sleeping mind

 

413.

"an inexhaustible wardrobe
has been placed
at the disposal
of each new
occurrence."
- John Ashbery, Scheherazade

 

414.

slowly becoming
someone new
   instead of me—
      transformed
intentionally

 

415.

   Can't
turn off my brain
thoughts blowing like rain.
Midnight! Just can't turn off the
   Rant.

 

416.

Another fine book devoured:
[schifanora, a boredom buster,]
swilled down, eaten up,
digested whole, feeding my mind,
for hour after hour.

"Of fingers on a book
suddenly snapped shut.
- John Ashbery, A Man of Words

 

417.

The future bounced off
my fingers while too tightly
    holding the past.
The past slipped through
my fingers while readily
    reaching to the future.
My fingers touched my fingers
    praying in the Now.

 

418.

My middle finger says "up yours."
Fate might give us the finger,
and, as a rule of thumb, we
must accept the bad some.
I thank my middle finger
for sticking up for me.
Fist Up, Fuck You Racist America.

Doggerel Verses

 

419.

Powered by my fingers my
cellphone works for me
pressing, sliding, scrolling,
from screen to screen;
the main App is my hand.

 

420.

I've always been
just a little
   out of hand
   out of touch
with Reality.

Cantos of the Hands

 

421.

"One primary color can make me feel mellow
when warm like honey heated up or like rays of a golden sun.
It’s flax, saffron, blond, and canary yellow,
cheerful like a daffodil and bumblebee fun.
It’s bananas too and a well-buttered bun!
- Adrea Dietrich

"Never paint except
with the three primary colors
[red, blue, and yellow]
and their derivatives."
- Camille Pissarro

 

422.

= Hands Down =
= their real =
= their true =
= their here =
= their new =

 

423.

Memorial Day
end of May—
    remembering
dead soldiers who
    lost all their days.

 

424.

He sure Fooled me
as I could see—
        to late
    to unbuckle
my Stupidity.

 

425.

    Ten o'clock
    time for bed
just a habit
in my body's head—
to close another day.

 

426.

The marvelous minuscule
    Has Magic for its Curse
Taking it away from itself
Not great, just common place,
   Tricked out of its rightful state.

The Bottom Line

 

427.

The Supreme Being thing
a theological dream
compared to Billions of Things—
    Taking a bite of Reality
      spitting out the seeds.

The Bottom Line

 

428.

aching hips
    skinned shin
        hurting shoulder
stupid grin—
wishing I was 50 again

 

429.

Driving up to Siskiyou Summit
on Interstate 5:
        trucks lumbering up,
    cars slowing down, then
everyone speeding fast
Down the steep Mountain side.

 

430.

University of California
    at Santa Barbara
    at Santa Cruz—
seaside campus life
shaping student's minds.

 

431.

When my mother died
we all cried;
When my father died
        sadly
hardly anyone cried.

 

432.

   To-ing and Fro-ing
Com-ing and Go-ing
Tip toeing through
   Time Zones—
      Seeking Unknowns

 

433.

Listening to teachers speak
and reading what they wrote—
        actor or writer,
    performer or author;
significantly different insights.

 

434.

Asked my Voyager Tarot deck,
   "What will inspire me today?"
It said: "Steer the Chariot with Strength,
Learn, Aspire to be a Hierophant"
    Vague, but somehow wise.

The Hierophant respects the Past
but wisely adapts
to the present tasks—
        teaching others how to be
    peaceful, good and wise.

Tarot Notes

"Poets are the Hierophants of an unapprehended inspiration; the mirrors of the gigantic shadows which futurity casts upon the present; the words which express what they understand not."
- Percy Bysshe Shelley, A Defense of Poetry, 1820

 

435.

ACE hardware store
   Spring Plant Sale:
veggies and roses
flags and hoses—
        Memorial Day

 

436.

Walking today
so slow—
        a snail
    slimed
on the go

 

437.

Tulips
erect
red & cream—
    gentle breeze
        fans my dreams

 

438.

      watering
parched plants
dutifully—
      June sunshine
sucking energy

[June in the Garden Anthology]

 

439.

birds in the bird bath
      flapping their wings
drinking and bathing—
eying each other sexually
      seeking a fling

 

440.

she quoted her poem
held in her hand—
      some poets in line
ready to rant
      at Open Mic time...
some bitter minds

 

441.

June is her name
June is a month
June is for weddings
June is when school's out
June is before July
June is ...

[June in the Garden Anthology]

 

442.

downtown Vancouver
at dusk—
homeless men
            hitting their heads
      mumble and shout

 

443.

San Andreas Fault
below Tomales Bay—
      experts warning
seaside folks
            move away

Highway 1 in California

 

444.

      hung up our flag
in our front yard—
not to proclaim MAGA
not to tout freedom...
      just Memorial Day

 

445.

tired of everything
nothing interesting
bored and bitter
deepening funk
can't laugh

 

446.

family dinner
Memorial Day—
      nobody mentioned
            what dead soldiers
Gave

 

447.

      External validation:
a printed book of your poems,
a positive review
a prize in a poetry contest
people actually buying your book.
      If not, internal satisfaction.

Reviews of Mike Garofalo's Websites

 

448.

one
day she
said to me,
      "your going to hell
   before you die in 2035"

 

 

My Quintain Style

Quintains: Bibliography

Pivot Point Ideas

Definitions: Quintains and Tanka

Cuttings: Haiku, Tercets, Quintains

25 Steps and Beyond: Collected Works

 

 

449.

"Einstein, the frizzy-haired,
proved E equals MC squared.
Thus, all mass decreases
as activity ceases?
Not my mass, my ass declared!"

"If God is good
half the Bible
is libel."
- Michael R. Birch

 

450.

Shapely as a
pile of dung.
Shapeless as a
pile of crap.
Which one?

Doggerel Verses

 

 

Bundled Up:
Quintains and Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

451.

Slept well
   all night.
Refreshed!
Nobody cares.
Morning light.

 

452.

She heard
his engine start
and rumble—
   he leaves for work
   at 3am alone

 

453.

The "New York School" of poets,
a brand, a moniker,
an ad man's ploy:
O'Hara, Koch, Schuyler, Ashbery, Guest ...
Sustained a new movement's lively arc
of the post 1950's avant-garde.

Slouching Into Incoherence

 

454.

'To sustain a language that is both mucky and perfumed, to bring us face to face with the Now in which everything must happen, to have the reader speak the poem, to communicate something unknown to the reader, to write the poem fit for the occasion."
- Paraphrase of David Herd, JA&AP, p.7 and John Ashbery

John Ashbery Studies

 

455.

You can smoke some shit,
drink until your shit faced,
buy some more shit,
   feel like shit,
and find yourself in a boat load of shit.

   What the Shit

 

456.

Knock! Knock!
the door was locked.
Richard Braudigan was dead on the floor,
shot himself and left a note:
      "Sorry for the mess."

 

457.

convoluted
contorted
confusing
      Prose—
         delighted me

 

458.

mowed the lawn
pulled some weeds
watered plants—
      an old gardener's
      ritual deeds

 

459.

the hostess with the mostess
hosted another party fine
poured the wine
told jokes
dined

 

460.

showering
warm water
comforting my body
tired from working today
toweling off, ready to lay

 

461.

Stopped watching TV
all week
      eliminated—
900 commercials
polluting my brain.

Consumerist Identities

 

462.

waiting for sunset
late May day—
         listening to cello
      playing softly
   time away

 

463.

Holding a eucalyptus seed
gnarly little balls
round and hard—
      fragrant memories
of Tomales Bay

The Eucalyptus Trees in Tomales Bay

 

464.

Confessional poets expose:
their mental illnesses
their drug addictions
their failed love affairs—
      Please, more privacy.

 

465.

Friday afternoon
suburban silence
accompanies walkers—
        dogs bark
     under trees

 

466.

back muscles
cramping up—
    old age
        creeping up
unfortunately

 

467.

        Mourning
    her death
yesterday—
passing
    images of graves

 

468.

        drugstore shelves
        full and neat—
clerks working
overtime shifts
for birthday gifts

 

469.

commotion in
the check out line—
no ID
    for a bottle
        of wine

 

470.

tempted to buy
a cannabis joint—
    reminded myself
of the slippery path
         to Excess

 

471.

A penny saved
a worthless act.
A million dollars
    saved—
        unnecessary

 

472.

Little boats float down
    the Cowlitz River
scooping up Eulachon smelt.
Oily slimy skinny fishlets
    flopping wildly into nets.

 

473.

reading e.e.'s poems
in the campus shade
students walk by silently;
    somewhere in a library
hangs another painting by e.e.

[e.e.cummings (1894-1962),
American painter, author, poet.]

 

474.

being baffled
spurs a fight
        to find
solutions
to the bind

 

475.

"Our novels get longa and longa
Their language gets stronga and stronga
There’s much to be said
For a life that is led
In illiterate places like Bonga"
- H. G. Wells

 

476.

The plot opens a non-distinct door
into a room as bland as a broom
where four people who never met before
face each other for evermore entombed
a No Exit sign on every locked door.

 

477.

Different voices counseled his listening mind
Poised like a sprinter at the white chalk line
Ready for the pistol's blank Pop-Shot
Carrying the baton of rapt ears and mind
To philosophically fly towards the finish line.

 

478.

comatose in Room 205
fourth floor of hospital—
        family gathered
     waiting patiently
for me to die

 

479.

"The tide rises, the tide falls,
The twilight darkens, the curlew calls;
Along the sea-sands damp and brown
The traveler hastens toward the town,
And the tide rises, the tide falls."
William Wadsworth Longfellow,
The Tide Rises the Tide Falls

 

480.

corn on the cob
cooked and buttered—
where did it
    come from
        in cold May

 

481.

Neighborhood fat-men
talking outside—
    every fourth word "Fuck"
        every sixth work "Shit"
"God damn" for emphasis.

[Current American Eloquence]

 

482.

Legs like cement bags
        heavy to lift
     sluggish to stride—
nodded and smiled
at other old passersby

 

483.

"Earth raised up her head,
From the darkness dread & drear.
Her light fled:
Stony dread!
And her locks covered with grey despair."
- William Blake, Earth's Answer

 

484.

Reading John Ashbery
at 11:05 under a night light
    despite tired eyes—
puzzled by ironic asides
surprised by metaphorical twists

 

485.

    I was under his thumb:
disgraced, put down, numb.
    I was under her thumb:
loved, uplifted, fun.
    Utterly Different Thumbs.

 

486.

"A triangle of light against the wall,
as though a lizard—no, a lizard’s dream
luxuriated there, pleased with itself.
With time it shifts, though imperceptibly:
an arrowhead of aimless, seamless stealth."
- Humphrey Astley, The Quintains

 

487.

Up at 5 am
still dark outside—
        water steaming
    coffee brewing;
later sunrise.

 

488.

"Helen, thy beauty is to me
Like those Nicaean boats of yore,
That gently, o’er a perfumed sea,
The weary, way-worn wanderer bore
To his own native shore."
- Edgar Allen Poe, To Helen

 

488.

The Flashing Lights of Destiny

grabbed his wallet
and his keys and
drove home—
    could not remember
        where he lived

Dreaming
he could not
    remember
important things—
        a Nightmare!

light bulb
burned out—
    sat in the dark
        alone
            for hours

    Forgot his
ATM password;
Misplaced
his cellphone—
    baffled and alone.

        forgot to
take his medicine—
        slowly digging
his own
grave

 

489.

"In everyone there sleeps
A sense of life lived according to love.
To some it means the difference they could make
By loving others, but across most it sweeps
As all they might have done had they been loved."
- Philip Larkin, Whitsun Weddings

 

490.

The garden glowed red rain
His mental state was insane
He stumbled and fell in his sleep
Walked backward in the street
Crushed bananas with his cleats

 

491.

    She wanted to be adored
bought lingerie
at the Fredrick's store—
        for an hour
    his interest flared

 

492.

"Some primal termite knocked on wood
And tasted it, and found it good!
And that is why your Cousin May
Fell through the parlor floor today."
- Ogden Nash

 

493.

"Life is an immobile, locked,
Three-handed struggle between
Your wants, the world's for you, and (worse)
The unbeatable slow machine
That brings what you'll get.
- Philip Larkin, Life with a Hole in It

 

494.

The Tower in Astoria
    high on the hill
a monument to one history—
selective rendition art homage
    to past portside pioneers.

 

495.

twisted mind
denies his crimes—
        jury must decide
    separating truth
out from lies

 

496.

colored fantasies
    vivid dreams
    shades of insights
scraps of epiphanies
    boundless sensuality

 

497.

He spied a sea shell at his feet
gleaming gris azul shimmering
sat in bubbles on salty sand—
    much younger than he
dead already, flipped by the sea.

 

498.

It took him hours and hours
To figure a proper solution
Out. Quitting was not
Optional. Not right.
Thinking bites!

 

499.

Too Hot!
            Sweat
        Dripping
    Down
Now

 

 

 

 

500.

Spots of Time shined
    clear in Wordsworth's Mind;
Still Points stalled in lines
    for Eliot's visions of Signs;
Reminders of Specificity Underlined.
    Coming-Going, slipping on by.

    Happenings come and go
Undoubtedly a grand fine Show
Grabbing our wandering Attentions
    Fixing a scene well Framed
Then drifting down in Oblivion.

 

Bundled Up:
Quintains, Pentastichs, Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

Poems 1-99
Poems 100-199
Poems 200-299
Poems 300-399
Poems 400-499
Poems 500-599
Poems 600-699
Poems 700-799
Poems 800-899
Poems 900-1,000
Quintains Research

 

501.

Taste?
A matter of opinion?
No.
A matter of will, of choice,
of a moral and social voice.

 

502.

No Trumps in my Hand

I find Trump tasteless:
no music, no literature,
no dogs, no joy ...
just angry Twitters from a
rich, bitter, petty, lonely boy.

Blue suit, blue tie,
a red hat on his orange head.
Mumbling nothings disconnected,
bragging, criticizing,
bouncing golf balls off our heads.

Even the First Lady dislikes
this phony fellow,
staying away from the White House,
to avoid this lying felon,
a goofball red hat devil.

Mao devotees had their Red Book,
Trump devotees their Red Hat.
Dictators both full of wrath.
Destroyers of the culture of history.
False prophets of our solipsist destinies.

503.

Turned the pages one by one
reading slowly in the shade
stopped at the start of Chapter 5—
went inside
sipped a beer, then slept.

 

504.

"Over the river, and through the wood,
To grandfather's house we go;
The horse knows the way
To carry the sleigh
Through the white and drifted snow."
- Lydia Maria Child, Thanksgiving Day

 

505.

“If it
Were lighter touch
Than petal of flower resting
On grass, oh still too heavy it were,
Too heavy!”
- Adelaine Crapsey, The Guarded Wound

 

506.

"Moments come and moments go
as time keeps marching on;
hold me now and kiss me slow
‘fore sunlight breaks with morning dawn,
and wills this precious moment gone."
- John Dondolf, A Moment Frozen in Time

 

507.

"Love built a stately house, where Fortune came,
And spinning fancies, she was heard to say
That her fine cobwebs did support the frame,
Whereas they were supported by the same;
But Wisdom quickly swept them all away."
- George Herbert, The World

 

508.

Three Post-Modern Poetry Rules

The poem
Stands for Itself;
Not for something
Outside of
Itself.

Allow chance
to procreate—
open doors
for randomness
to integrate

Play with your work
work more with play;
Creating words a game
the game here is to play—
write poetry this way

[Fairfield Porter's 'Three Rules'
for avant-garde poetry, 1959]

Slouching Into Incoherence

 

509.

Smells tantalized his tongue
Bells rung in his soul
    Visions of ripening plums
Lifted his fork to his mouth
    Tasted the pulse of paradise.

 

510.

watermelon juice
    dripping from my mouth
        down my shirt—
juicy June
fond memories

[June in the Garden Anthology]

 

511.

"A flea and a fly in a flue
Were imprisoned, so what could they do?
Said the fly, "let us flee!"
"Let us fly!" said the flea.
So they flew through a flaw in the flue."
- Ogden Nash

 

512.

DON'T YOU BELIEVE?
    In what? I asked.
IN JESUS CHRIST?
    Not really. Don't shout.
I prefer a Buddha's doubts.

 

513.

"Eternity in an hour"
billions born from a dime
kilowatts from nuclear power
millions of sperm working overtime—
Blows my Mind!

 

514.

"At least I have the flowers of myself
and my thoughts, no god
can take that;
I have the fervour of myself for a presence
and my own spirit for light."

-Hilda Doolittle, Eurydice

515.

Happy
    Perhaps
        Sometimes ...

[engaged
romance]
{surprised
chance}
!thoughtless
dance!
     
=pleasures
enhanced=
#warm
pants#
@spurious
rants@
     
$wallet
fat$
&enthusiastic
claps&
.......
     
     
     

 

516.

Seriousness not happiness
Intensity not flippancy
Playing not winning
Something not nothing;
One or the Other, or Both.

 

517.

I tried to make, to paint
the Pacific sea Moon tonight,
but ran out of paint, brushes to,
a glueless collage waved apart,
the canvas burned in the dark

the Sea in a thimble would not fit
now on the burnt canvas tossed away,
brushes floating in grating surf
a hundred Lowe's paint cans unleashed
to color the kites at Klitsan Beach

the collage reassembled, laughed and cooed
showering implications on our shoes
skipping by condos at Ocean Shores
painters all wept, locked their doors,
painted starfish on concrete floors

I gave up unhandy tasks for me
wording and naming better pants a fit,
the painter's lot is not my thing;
gave away my painter's smock,
took up a notebook, walked to the dock.

 

518.

Dead house plant
withered and brown—
Old glasses now,
    frame bent and broken;
need visit optometrist now.

 

519.

Some family and friends
homosexuals, not queer,
ordinary folks of good cheer,
hardworking, smart, nice;
no reason to fear.

 

520.

A nonce word, a cryptic term,
specified to a specific occasion
fixed for only one case:
    D-Day, Overlord, OOD:
June 6, 1944, Normandy

 

521.

"There was a young belle of old Natchez
Whose garments were always in patchez.
When comments arose
On the state of her clothes,
She replied, "When Ah itchez, Ah scratchez."
- Ogden Nash

 

522.

"There was an Old Man with a beard,
Who said, "It is just as I feared!
Two Owls and a Hen,
Four Larks and a Wren,
Have all built their nests in my beard!"
- Edward Lear

 

523.

Pismo Beach trailer park
packed full of old folks
    huddling in their metal box
from dawn to dark;
    never going beachcombing.

 

524.

Body like the valley.
Blood like the river.
Mind like the sunshine.
—ideas shaped by words
            similes like analogies

 

525.

            tip tap
raindrops
on my vest—
      a morning walk in
June

 

526.

Nataraja, Nataraja,
Shiva Nataraja—
            yoga hymns a
      floating chorus over
            our solemn mats

 

527.

cold winds
            Netarts Bay—
on Three Arch Rocks
            tuffed puffins
fly and play

 

 

528.

Tuffed Puffins—
      bright orange beaks
      long yellow head tuffs;
congregate and breed
near Netarts Bay.

Highway 101 and 1: Docu-Poem

 

529.

      Puce bustier
not for the shy—
            elegant cleavage
      caught his eyes
aroused his mind

Doggerel Verses

 

530.

"Hickory dickory dock,
the mouse ran up the clock;
the clock struck one
      and down he run;
hickory dickory dock."
- Mother Goose

 

531.

I Do This I Do That:
Like O'Hara's rat race
      from cafe to subway
      gallery to Queer Baths;
from here to there, Fast.
- James Lehman,
The Last Avant-Garde

 

532.

"I hear the sewage singing
underneath my bright white seat and know
the somewhere sometimes it will reach the sea
gulls and swordfishes will find it richer that a river."
- Frank O'Hara

 

533.

It is just the thing
this thing in my hand,
unlike other things—
            something to hold
      a brown rubber band.

 

534.

She was a hot tamale
He a cool dude
      Together a Love Couple
Hip and real rude
Young with fast moves

 

535.

control freak
pushy boss
loud mouth
      rants and raves
            pain in the ass

 

536.

Poetry reading
cool night,
      audience clapping
      from delight—
Ghost Town crowd.
- Vancouver, WA
Ghost Town Open Mic

 

537.

"Sumer is ycomen in,
Loude sing cuckoo!
Groweth seed and bloweth meed.
And springth the wode now.
    Sing cuckoo!

Ewe bleteth after lamb,
Loweth after calve cow,
Bullock sterteth, bucke, verteth,
Merye sing, cuckoo!
    Cuckou, cuckoo"
- Anonymous, 1250

 

538.

      trimming my beard
            shaving my face
my bald head—
needs little attention
but for some cream

 

538.

      I learned Roger died today.
We lifted weights at the gym
four days a week in Red Bluff
for three years together;
His legs were stronger than 50 men.

 

539.

Reading Billy Collins:
ordinary, direct,
down to earth, lived,
relateable, complex—
      Readers are so fortunate.

 

540.

Midnight in Mendocino
            Dawn in Eureka
      Noon in Port Orford
Dusk in Coos Bay—
Highway 101 was slow today.

 

541.

"But all they want to do
is tie the poem to a chair with rope
and torture a confession out of it.
They begin by beating it with a hose
to find out what it really means."
- Billy Collins,
Introduction to Poetry

 

542.

this uninterrupted
series of fads—
    flashing by
    like advertising ads;
flashes of fools-gold
in a bottomless bucket

 

543.

"From a small vase, sparking blue, lift
a yellow pencil, the sharpest of the bouquet,
and cover pages with tiny sentences
like long rows of devoted ants
that followed you in from the woods."
- Billy Collins,
Advice to Writers

 

544.

Not lonely when I am alone
    Content with busy invisibility
A movement of One, not avant-garde
Not steered by a crowd
    By agendas other than my own.

 

545.

"So you read 'Billy Collins'"
    she bandied with a smirk;
preferring The Beats,
not a homespun bourgeois teacher.
He bristled around this poetry snob.

 

546.

She laughed at his innocence:
        he frowned,
too much diplomacy
and faked charms
        to bring her around.

 

547.

"When, beside a window, one feels evening prevail
Who is there who can receive its slanting veil
And not regret day that bore it on its stream
Whether day was joy or under evil's regime
Drawing us to the one and deploring the other

Regretting the departure of all our brothers
And all that made the day, including its strains."
- John Ashbery, Some Words

 

548.

    My poems often collapse
into bad art, boring stanzas,
ho-hum themes, empty memes,
trite things, wasted moonbeams.
    But, every so often a good one.

 

549.

Reading interviews
    with haiku poets—
doctors, dancers, managers,
publishers, artists, teachers...
    fine kind souls.

Interviews by Jacob Seltzer

 

550.

        they came
        they wrote
        they lived
        they died
planted words for us

 

551.

        summer surf
    so cold—
surfers in Westport
float near jetty rocks
in wet suits from neck to toe

 

552.

    cold hearted killers
        In Cold Blood—
chain sawing up enemies
for a drug lord's rule
    heartlessly for cash

 

553.

Up at 3 am
Sleepless in Red Bluff—
    listening to a string quartet
        playing Philip Glass
into my green silent room.

 

554.

At 80 years Old:
still walking on flat ground,
still gardening on the land,
still doing yoga on the floor...
staying grounded, hoping for more.

 

555.

For Krishna
Black is Beautiful—
    Shyam (blue-black)
he is colored by kids
in India's religious coloring books.

Mysterious Dark,
    Mystical Blue,
as bright as midnight—
        Wisdom, Compassion,
Singing, and Righteousness
        are his true hue.

 

556.

"These two spring from the same source
but different in name;
    This appears as darkness,
Darkness within Darkness,
    The Gate to All Mysteries."
- Gia-Fu Feng and Jane English
Dao De Jing, Chapter 1

[Dao De Jing,
Concordance and Anthology,
by Mike Garofalo.]

 

557.

"Life is disjointed, repetitions,
and a meaningless wicket"
said Samuel Becket;
a dog-eat-dog world,
a rat-race Theater of the Absurd.

 

558.

His poem didn't depict one thing
    Or paint a photographic scene
Or tell a good story to me—
    It just was, on it's own
Just, actually, just Something.

 

559.

my mind retreated
        hid today
refusing to speak—
    incognito
        unrecognized

 

560.

the poetry reader's
soft voice
slow pace—
    became unheard
        lost in space

 

561.

sunny day
end of May—
    mocking bird
        changing pitches
stretching sounds

 

562.

        she called
        to say
    he left
her today—
they both cried

 

563.

The green of Spring
lawns mowed down
        glowing at dawn
    bordered by trees—
ignoring me.

 

564.

We did the same things
    Almost nothing!
Sipped coffee and cream.
Watched walkers walk by.
    Day-dreamed.

 

565.

Maybe the syntax is haywire
    wrong the yes spelling maybe
maybe the semantics wavers
    down upside negatives tripling
clearly obscurity unintended.

 

566 to 593
Hood Canal
Dosewallips State Park

Washington State

 

566.

        Highway 101
    winds past
Brinnon to Potlach—
from forests to the edge of the seas,
the Hood sea flapping endlessly.

 

567.

    O! Amazed! The pale blue sea—
The Hood Canal’s little waves
slapping the rocky shore.
Happy oysters settling—
    Oh! Took my breath away.

 

568.

The buzz of aircraft
over the red cedars
        fading...
a big black ant
crawled over me

 

569.

No ancient ruins
no famous folks
no documented histories
no great battle scenes—
    just fish in the Hood Canal.

 

570.

Seal Rock campground
concrete picnic bench—
        slight breeze
dappled shade
    nobody here but me

 

571.

Heartburn’s heavy
        painful stab—
pharmacy had
what I need
    Rolaids' Tabs

 

572.

Occasional red
Pacific Madrone trunk—
    roadside decoration
sprinkled amongst
spruce and cedar trees

 

573.

A couple walking
the Seal Rock path—
    he very tall
    she very short
hand in hand

 

574.

Not a single boat
of blue or gray
        speeding by
anywhere today—
    Monday workday!

 

575.

Keyboard singing
from the French Suite
or Well Tempered Clavier—
    J.S. Bach by Argerich
in the dark woods on MP3s.

 

576.

        Surprisingly,
the campground was empty
these final days
of Spring—
Twilight Zone scene.

 

577.

The cafe was empty
except for me
eating fried Hamma Hamma oysters—
        the perky young waitress
        told me her stories

 

578.

One blooming rhododendron
on a slope dressed in spiky ferns;
        one girl and four boys
    waiting for the school bus
coexisting amicably.

 

579.

emptiness hums
a solemn tune
    clothed invisibly
hiding in
branches of hanging skies

 

580.

Rainbow View Falls trail
steep and long
        for an 80 year old—
    my knees and thighs
ached for two days on.

 

581.

Mt. Walker flanked
deep Rainbow Falls—
    salmon hatchery
on the tiny Quilcene stream,
returning hatchlings to the sea.

 

582.

The Hood waterways
blurred in hazy mist
dull gray obscured today—
        flashes of sunlight
    cut through the trees.

 

583.

From Chimacum
to Quilcene, picturesque
rolling hills of farms—
    faster cars
        Speed around me!

 

584.

“DosEwallips” they say
not “Doswallips” like me,
spelled “Dosewallips” correctly—
Saying “pOtato” or “poTato,”
tastes so good either way.

 

585.

In heated afternoons
I sit in the shade;
    reading dead poets
        still alive
in printed words on paper trees.

 

586.

Many see them in clouds
    faces and animals
appearing and disappearing.
I see them in photographs
as if captured alive.

 

587.

She told me
“look for the Strawberry Moon”
tonight; above the Hood sea.
    I did. The Man in the Moon
was munching plump strawberries.

 

588.

    The road through Sequim—
four lanes fast pass
flat fields of lavender and grass
in the rain shadow of Mt. Olympus,
    sunnier, drier, less overcast.

 

589.

    The tourists nod as they pass
from Port Townsend to Port Angeles
on a straight stretch of Hwy 101—
        sipping a cafe mocha
            on the run.

 

590.

        I’m not in Beijing, Rome,
    or Buenos Aries—
just in the Geoduck cafe (in Brinnon),
eating clams, drinking beer,
listening to locals I can understand.

 

591.

Strawberry Moon
hung low
    orange glow
    midnight rose
over Lilliwaup Cove

 

592.

Elk heads stuffed
on the Geoduck Cafe wall.
Still life taxidermy. Hair
    bristling. Comatose,
heard the elk's stifled moan.

 

593.

Codfish battered
and fried. French fries
    stale and crisp.
Ketchup and Tartar
    sauce for dips. Cold beer.

 

566 to 593
Hood Canal
Dosewallips State Park

Washington State

 

594.

    The tail of the snake
is not in his mouth—
his skin sheds off
    a mouse fills
his wide open mouth

 

595.

The Nineteenth Century
    ended that day
we sang Auld Lang Syne
at a B&B parlor
in Ashland, Oregon, that Key day.

 

596.

    Om Mani Padme Hum
    Om Mani Padme Hum...
Ooooommmmmm.
Jeweled lotus in pond scum.
Chanting devotees hum till done.

 

597.

Snow on Mt. Saint Helens
Chocolate on a vanilla ice cream cone.
A brown hat on her blonde head.
Green lottery tickets on a white table.
Waitress wiping the counter clean.

 

598.

    The box cars steadily passed
graffiti tagged billboard blaque
colored border impeccable to claim
residuals from the BSNF Railway
chugging to Expressionist destinies.

 

599.

        Sloshing water
    splashing waves
rocky identity—
smoldering campfires
blowing paper trash.

 

 

 

 

600.

playing gods

Accomplish the Impossible?
Play God? Make The Normal passé?
Cure cancer? Make solar panels?
Create new arts. Know the Future.
    Ready, Go, Let’s Start! Soon!

    Appropriate the Everything
        passing quickly by—
a candle burning at both ends
machines that mimic the mind
mankind walking on the moon

Lazers opening up an eye
a skyscraper a half-mile high
a nuclear reactor making electricity
wine from California in Dubai
vaccine stalling a Black Death Doom

Computers held in your hand
English speakers in every land
millions napalmed in Vietnam
MRI slicing up your brain
new seeds bio-engineered in labs

Twelve tone music in your head
an orthopedic mattress making your bed
transforming sand into computer chips
air frying frozen bagels for your lips
new, New, New, even before this afternoon

Televisions in every room
Radios in every ear worldwide
Around the world jet airplanes fly
Cargo ships shipping timber to Tokyo
Basketball teams in Cameroon

Music playing from CDs
Oil pumped up from underseas
Satellites filling up the sky
Internet smarter with AI
Cruise ships docking in Cancun

Wonders upon Wonders—New!
Faster than a speeding bullet train
Leaping to Mars in a single bound
Yet, seeing the deadly arrows in flight
    Pollution our Kryptonite.

 

Bundled Up:
Quintains, Pentastichs, Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

Poems 1-99
Poems 100-199
Poems 200-299
Poems 300-399
Poems 400-499
Poems 500-599
Poems 600-699
Poems 700-799
Poems 800-899
Poems 900-1,000
Quintains Research

 

601.

"Your poems."
a clunkhead said, "have grown
more open." I don't want to be open,
merely to say, to see and say, things
as they are."
- James Schuyler

 

602.

Let things be as they are,
that is, as we, truly,
    encounter them, from
near or from afar;
elusive as they are.

 

603.

"If only I had
Merely watched as they fell...
The plum blossoms!
But, alas, their fragrance
Lingers still on my sleeve."
- Sosei, Japan

 

604.

"I shut my eyes
But nothing whatsoever
Surfaces in my mind...
In my utter loneliness
I open them up again"
- Takuboku, Japan

 

605.

sun finally
arrived—
        high clouds
    blew away
clearing the sky

 

606.

The Past, Present, and Future
agreed to meet in Times Square
on New Year's Eve.
At first, words were tense,
as they all had disagreed

on when to meet for
the Big Apple festivities.
The Future said 'come early,'
the Past said 'not late,'
the Present said

'just be there' fellow time travelers,
to sip from a silver flask
whiskey from a Kentucky distillery,
and with gusto sing
"Auld Lang Syne" to celebrate.

Sombody asked the three
"Are you drunk?"
The Past said "I forgot."
the Future said "tomorrow I'll know,"
the Present sat on the ground plastered

singing Scottish melodies:
"we’ll tak’ a cup o’ kindness yet,
frae morning sun till dine;"
But we’ve wander’d mony a weary fit,
sin’ auld lang syne."

 

607.

1234567
12345
1234567
1234567
1234567

7-5-7-7-7

7 5 4 1 2 5 7 3
5 7 6 5 3 7
7 3
7 5 4 5 6 7 5 7
7 7 5 5 6 7 7 5
7 7 5 5 6 7 5 7

[Explain]


fenced in by five lines,
boxed in by seven sounds—
still, meaning flows out
a fixed playing field for words,
a frame for our honest doubts.

 

 

608.

Flying flies
jumping butterflies
    busy bees—
a million movements
    between blooming shrubs.

 

609.

    Bonsai pot empty
        twisted tree died—
judging nursery plants
for appropriateness
for a new bonsai.

 

610.

Packing the car:
camping gear
    close and tight;
    extra blankets
for colder nights.

 

611.

Slipped and fell
    to my knees.
Knocked my head
    into the door.
Luckily, I’m still me.

 

612.

Taking up fallen limbs
scattered randomly—
my back ached
bending down
no stopping now

 

613.

the soccer pitch
slick from dew—
players wore cleated shoes
but they knew
falling hard could be bad news

 

614.

It was raining
on the day I was born:
January 23, 1946 in Los Angeles.
I’ve been quite cold and wet
    ever since.

 

615.

I was wobbly
legs unsteady
balance marginal
a little light-headed—
    Hung Over unpleasantly!

 

616.

More bombing in the
Ukraine and Palestine—
civilian casualties climb
        Terror reigns
    criminal politicians lie.

 

617.

Counting the millions
killed in the Great Wars—
    uncounted corpses
in the rubble of war
    uncountable horror.

 

 

618.

Don’t dream very much
never did!
Or, I can’t remember
the dreams I did
    have but lost.

 

619.

Consciousness
like a knock-knock joke:
    Who’s there? Me!
Who? A Basket of Impressions
passing through...

 

620.

Dogs eat chicken
dogs - don’t eat - dogs;
men eat beans and corn
        unless starving
     then eat their dogs.

 

621.

I watched my
mother and father
        Die!
Unconscious before me,
drifting away so peacefully.

 

622.

Beauty, indeed,
is a bit unendurable—
    a little goes a long way
a lot leaves us empty handed
    when it’s gone, we stay.

 

623.

        lulls, breaks, stops:
pauses in doing,
lunchtime on the job,
night closing days
dying at dawn

 

624.

Reading Robert Hass:
standing at Inverness
picking huckleberries
staring at an egret eating;
from the corner of his eye.

 

625.

    Woe to him
whose wasteland is within.
    Woe to them
whose wasteland is without.
Wastelands are not prose!

 

626.

He’s been dead
for forty years:
        he’s dead now
    dead tomorrow
unclocked forever anyhow.

 

627.

I saw him renege
playing with Tarot cards:
riffed the Hanged Man,
misplayed the Fallen Tower,
miscounted the Judgment card.

 

628.

bookstores glazed
in memories—
decades of bookshelves
becoming me
        I listen as I read

 

629.

The Tarot spread
before my teller’s eyes
speaks optimistically—
    the Hierophant
        never dies.

 

630.

“I write poems
for a stranger
born in some distant country
a hundred years
from now.”
- Mary Oliver

 

631.

I’m not a real poet,
just faking, actually,
    pretending to be
a word-smithing hacker,
too often unsuccessfully.

 

632.

Father Priest
     scolded me:
hell was my destiny
unless I Believed.
How incorrect was he?

 

633.

It requires just
    one poem, really,
    one really fine poem...
To keep you as a footnote
in the poetry history books.

 

634.

cordiality:
nice to you
you nice to me,
        not a rarity
    most places

 

635.

    Opening the door for
a charming elderly lady with white-grey
perfectly coiffed hair—
we smile, flirt a pinch,
pass on by, don’t touch.

 

636.

Chanting melodies
    In German—
Hildegard Von Bingen
ethereal beauty
in pure sound

 

637.

    Others know us
as we behave
as we say
as we reveal
till our final day.

 

638.

Vulgarity disdained
Ambiguity proclaimed
elegance praised
collegiate framed—
New Criticism (1950) Ruled the Game

Elegies to dead animals
multiplied like odes to joylessness
lacking spontaneity and frivolity
formal, polite, mythical, contrite
lacking vernacular bouncing delight.

 

639.

    Sailing around the room
    with Billy Collins at the helm—
the fan clicks above my head
the words bounce off the walls
ideas splash off the bow of brains.

Billy Collins

 

640.

I left my childhood behind
at some unspecified time
between 13 and 19—
        my loyal dog
seemed suddenly old.

 

641.

Drowsy afternoon
upward bound,
dinner done,
    crows squawk loud,
cellphone buzzes randomly.

 

642.

Bottles of glue creamy
neon. Papers untidy.
Rubber knives in steel
suitcases. Unlocked.
A license to kill.

 

643.

Covered with wind:
a tornado. Broken roof.
Cars tossed like loaded dice.
Windows sliced by 2 by 4s.
The crying silence after the storm.

 

644.

    See it again?
Pointless expanse,
    wanderlust compulsions,
unreasonable geographic obsessions—
frogs in a boiling pot.

 

645.

Thoughtless in Port Angeles.
As imprecise as moonlight.
As old as the St. Helens blast.
As sad as an empty whiskey bottle.
As painful as my sunburnt back.

 

646.

Noisy neighbors!
Boys bounce a basketball,
Mamma talks too loud,
baby cries. Children
scream in my dream.

 

647.

coffee cold
black bitter
ugly mug
    souvenir
        Stolen

 

648.

I once remembered
a better version of myself
figuratively. Clear
to the horizon of Being
crossing the edge of emptiness.

 

649.

Indifference a place,
faceless effigies of fate,
quitting this shallow job,
roaming to another State,
eating stale peanuts from a can.

 

650.

Trees together
silent speech—
fungi chatting underneath,
        coordinating
    October leaves.

 

651.

The painting slept in the truck
of her Ford unlike a log. Paint
puddled. Smeared in the heat.
Buckled the frame. Finally, died!
A muddled self-portrait without a name.

 

652.

His door was once always open
so mosquitoes flew in
    his generosity faltered
    his mood chagrin, so he
closed the door and locked within.

 

653,

Outside the cafe doors
bulletin boards with
pinned on business cards...
    Inside, locals gather
sitting, eating pancakes, talking.

 

654.

Eight Billion humans growing wilder
a Christened Cancer—
    impending suicidal
millions more on the Edges
crawling to the gallows end.

 

655.

The desire to smoke cannabis
in my deep blood brain
soaked from habits unrestrained;
the urges slowly leave in weeks
    but guilt still leaves a scar.

 

656.

'The No Kings Day' Protests
Against Fascist King Trump—
    He's at a big military parade
        to celebrate his birthday
mumbling nonsense to empty stands.

 

657.

    "Get Down On It!
What you gonna do?
Wanna get in a groove.
Get your back off the wall.
    Get Down On It!"
- Kool and the Gang

 

658.

        white lilies in bloom
    halfway through June—
Such a sexy smile,
    I'm beguiled,
but no chance to bloom

 

659.

        Blind Milton
    feared execution
for advocating the death
of King Charles the First.
God Save the King mobs at his door.

 

660.

Grasping my heart
as the poet cries—
    holding her pain
    embracing her sadness
        sharing her despair

 

661.

"Let me not to the marriage of true minds
Admit impediments. Love is not love
Which alters when it alteration finds
Or bends with the remover to remove
Oh, no, it is an ever-fixed mark ..."
- William Shakespeare, Sonnet 116

 

662.

"May I kiss you?"
he asked. Sweetly.
    A gentle shy man
kissing her hand
    seeking her plush lips.

 

663.

It's 10 O'Clock
    on the spot;
time for bed
she said—
        "workday ahead."

 

664.

    Music makes us Do
    what It wants us to Do—
the rhythms the grooves
makes us tap our shoes
sing the chorus in tune.

 

665.

I sat shivering
    in June—
put on a jacket
gloves and hat
    to fool the chill

 

666.

Mountains are moving
Seas are rising
Universals are unraveling.
        Shrubs are dying,
    Particulars are crying.

 

667.

She loved him.
He no longer cared—
    he left abruptly
never to return.
Left his three kids in a lurch.
    —Deadbeat Non-Dad!

 

668.

"Winter coming. Like the last heroic soldier
Of a defeated army, you'll stay at your post,
Head bared to the first snowflake.
Till a neighbor comes to yell at you,
'You're crazier that the weather, Charlie.'"
- Charles Simic, Against Winter

 

666.

"My activity is random as the wind
Why should I insist
The visitor is free to go
Or to stay, as he chooses:
I think you shd make yr decision."
- John Ashbery
The Double Dream of Spring

 

667.

I will have composed over 900
Quintains by July of 2025.
Many more 5 Liners to come,
even some from the past.
    Savory Quintain Snacks.

 

668.

After twenty years
they sold their home—
        escrow closed
    the house was empty,
last time to close that door.

 

669.

He built bookshelves
from smooth clean pine—
    she sanded and stained
        till they looked fine,
then filled with books in line.

 

670.

        tight pants
    tight shirt—
fat man
realizes he
    needs new clothes

 

671.

Breakfast at Karen's Cafe:
complex omelets divine,
fruit compote delights,
fresh biscuits buttered warm,
coffee creamed with a smile.

 

672.

        the poet
played with sounds—
a perfect pitch of ideas
melodic intimacies
rhythm of rhyming phrases

 

673.

            can't sleep
        mind manic
    body panic
all anxiety—
    unglued sanity

 

674.

        two dogs
    on leashes
in a man's hand—
Sunday morning
    gallivant

 

675.

A Trump supporter
started the Orangeman's parade
    by shooting four Democrats
            (Killing Two)
in Minnesota that day—
Orange Hate Power Plays.

[June 14, 2025, Saturday]

 

676.

cold June day
    overcast grey—
chilly walk
around the blocks
         comely lilies yellow

 

677.

Reading anthologies
of English poetry—
    poets now living
    and poets dead
words marching through time.

[Poetry Anthologies I study.]

 

678.

Closer inspection
quickly revealed—
        my sock had holes,
    my shoe was split,
my feet were cold and wet.

 

679.

party coming:
        moving chairs
cleaning tables
washing fruit
        combing hair

 

680.

I felt crappy today,
    nobody gives a shit anyway.
We all have too much crap to do,
plus pick up all the shit
     from the human zoo.

Doggerel Verses, #43

 

681.

flooding river
bends willow trees—
          bird's nests
     fall down
on muddy ground

 

682.

At Seal Rock camp:
     no seals
no campers
     no silence;
closed in Winter

 

683.

     Never darkest
before the dawn—
     a little light
very dim
always creeps in.

 

684.

The knife's edge
was dull blunt—
          could not
carve faces in the
     the sides of cups

 

685.

worried more
every day—
     grandchildren
          loosing good jobs,
economy in disarray.

 

686.

     The occasion was not a birthday
or a parade of graduates in tasseled hats
or soldiers marching on Veterans Day
or lovers cutting a wedding cake;
     just a poet scribbling words today.

 

687.

          I was the occasion
     involved in the occasions
that occasionally occurred
for me amongst others
     in places familiar every day.

 

688.

     hidden in the ordinary
explicitly occasional fare—
inspired by dinnertime
spilled wine on ash trays
          imaginary smoke rises

 

689.

     While leaning on a dirty wall
on Santa Monica Boulevard
the rough trade leather master
blows smoke from a spliff
     while talking with a john
who wants to be whipped.

Doggerel Verses

 

689.

          Waiting for Godot
          a waste of time—
weeks later he stumbles by,
stoned on amphetamines.
never apologized.

Waiting for the Master

 

690.

No Roman Roads in Oregon
No Sistine Chapel in Washington
No Parthenon in Idaho—
but a concrete Stonehenge
in the hills above Maryhill.

Stonehenge on the Columbia

 

691.

Don't sweat
the Small Stuff!
Rather shiver in the bliss
of ignoring
the Big Stuff.

 

692.

What I had and
     what I lost
     along this road of life—
generosity of largesse,
empty wallet in my pocket.

 

693.

Stuck between cars rocked
in a hot road place,
behind a gruesome accident—
     crushed bloody bodies
          bleeding lives away.

 

694.

The willows whispered
the stream sang
the birds all chirped—
     all round my peaceful perch
          hidden in my listening.

 

695.

     microwave oven
reheating pizza
popping popcorn—
     micro eating electricity
from Bonneville Dam

 

696.

Shake it down
mighty woman
     real Amazon
big and beautiful—
     'Brick House!'

 

697.

my soapy soul
     washed down the drain—
by steaming water
over my head
     cleaning off my brains

 

698.

          my divided mind:
     a fraction of itself
half forward—half back
a third part ordinary delights
a fifth part flimsy insights

 

699.

     Ezra Pound
steeped in Grecian Heroes
sailing seas on bloody conquests.
Once pandering to Mussolini,
Singing praises for Nazi hates.

 

 

 

 

700.

Simplest Common Sense

    Common Sense
often not so common
and makes no sense—
the least common denominator
of stupidity simplified

    Used to justify
magically the dumbest
meanest cruelest acts
useless false opinions
selfish stupidity and lies

    Worshiped by self-righteous
solipsists bereft of any sense
of a real world bigger than 'I'.
Full of 'truths' empty of facts,
    willing to Kill to keep
their Fictions alive.

 

Bundled Up:
Quintains, Pentastichs, Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

Poems 1-99
Poems 100-199
Poems 200-299
Poems 300-399
Poems 400-499
Poems 500-599
Poems 600-699
Poems 700-799
Poems 800-899
Poems 900-1,000
Quintains Research

 

701.

Waking from a nap
groggy mind intact
    brushing cobwebs aside
rubbing tired eyes, surprised
    one hour had passed.

 

702.

"Who says that fictions only and false hair
Become a verse? Is there in truth no beauty?
Is all good structure in a winding stair?
May no lines pass, except they do their duty
Not to a true, but painted chair."
- George Herbert, Jordan(I)

 

703.

walking out
running back—
jogger traces
    familiar paths
        on a rubber track

 

704.

Full moon
morning sky—
    a white silhouette
    faintly traced
        for uplifted eyes.

 

705.

     My thoughts are Me:
no god can take away
no devil bury in ashes
no others bother to read,
     unimportant to all but Me.

 

706.

"Poets who wrote great poems, one by one,
And spaced by many years, each line an act
through which few labor, which no men retract,
This passion is the scholar's heritage,
The imposition of a busy age

The passion to condense from book to book,
Unbroken wisdom in a single look,
Though we know well when this fix the head
The mind's immortal,
but the man is dead."
- Yvor Winters, Time and the Garden

 

707.

Parting was not sweet
or a bit sorrowful—
     jubilant instead
our friendship's dead,
     free tomorrows.

 

708.

          Walking alone
     chewing my bones
of discontents—
wasted my time,
sickened my mind.

 

709.

"for no reason
hearing no voice
with no promise
praying to myself
be clear"
- W. S. Merwin
As Though I Was Waiting for That

 

710.

     dead bird
in a pot—
     odd place
to stop breathing
     shrivel and rot

 

711.

          rustling leaves
     maple trees
Japanese garden
     raked sand
          quiet rocks

 

712.

          Buddha statue
     in a corner—
sprig of cherry
blooming now
     Old unglazed vase.

 

713.

Sunny location
corner spot—
two ferns bursting
     three feet wide
     three feet tall

 

714.

blood pressure
higher...
     cuff around hand
     sitting taller—
fearing the measure

 

715.

     crisp clean grass
spread before my feet—
four inches high
green filled my eyes—
     summertime mind.

 

716.

bought a lottery ticket
and lost again—
     hoping Santa Claus
     will help me win
before Winter begins

 

717.

Finding your real identity
in the external existentials—
     of your creative hands
your work, your children,
     your daily humdrum.

 

718.

robins chatter
jubilantly—
sounds of love
sounds of hope
I imagine I hear

 

719.

In the sunshine
of old words
from poets before us
          we heard
     something unsayable.

 

720.

"This little black
Circle, with its tawny silk grass, babies hair.
There is a green in the air
     Soft, delectable.
It cushions me lovingly."
- Sylvia Plath

 

721.

     collaborated
with the Reader—
     echoes of understanding
between the lines
     inventive sharing minds

 

722.

First day of summer
          right on time
     every time—
caroling Solstice songs
     under June moons

 

723.

"Now cease, my lute, this is the last
Labour that thou and I shall waste,
And ended is that we begun.
Now is this song both sung and past,
My lute, be still, for I have done."
- Sir Thomas Wyatt, 1557

 

724.

     Eureka mansion
     Victorian clean-prim—
home of a Timber Baron's
well-dressed talkative twins;
      Chinamen sweat in the kitchen.

 

725.

"As Eliza stood twanging her zither
She beheld a vast sea serpent slither,
Oozing slime, up the beach
Till it came within reach
And she disappeared, no one knows whither."
- X. J. Kennedy

 

726.

Colored flashes in the window pane
Christmas lights glowing red and green.
    The homeless man has no name,
Sits in cold dark tent unseen,
Wearing a sock cap of red and green.

 

727.

"What is important Now
is to recover our senses.
We must learn to see more,
    to hear more,
        to feel more.

In place of hermeneutics
we need an erotics of art."
- Susan Sontag, 1964,
Against Interpretation

 

728.

    Sagebrush landscapes
of Eastern Oregon's dry lands;
broken by the Alford Desert
    with swirling twisters of sand
splitting the sky randomly.

 

729.

Some verses stretched the mind
          Baffled the understanding
     Confused the senses
Upset one's peace.
     Discomfort can rejuvenate.

 

730.

"Here is my faith, my vision, my burning bush.
It will burn on and never be consumed.
It will be here long after I have gone,
Long after the last farmer sleeps. And since
I speak for it, its silence speaks for me."
- Robert Francis, Juniper

 

731.

Paper for notebooks was a revolution,
Typewriters gave us another way to read,
Personal computers changed our minds,
Internet brought information to our finger tips...
    What's Next?
AI robots composing/singing songs we all like?

 

732.

          alone in my home
     writing some poems
willing to share;
at noon I stare
going nowhere

 

733.

Right-Wrong Wings Flapping

Some people stumbling
into Right Wing flights:
     of fabricated fears—
of wild masses marching
to Black Lives Matter

or Queers in incorrect bathroom toilets
or immigrant criminals at distant doors
or hungry children at free school lunches
or Wokes leaving their Church's pews in droves
or foreign inclusions in Sesame Street PBS

and renaming military bases after Yankees
and showing mixed marriages on TV ads
and threats to buying more machine guns
and worries over two many Chinese Dolls
and fearing that good women might lead

these advocates of inequality
these devotees of Fox New celebrities
these worshipers of a fat man's drivel
these desperate poor folks wanting to be rich
these flag wavers buying autographed Bibles

Cheering Loudly: 'Amerika, Gott mit uns!"
white power Jesus freak frauds
voting for convicted criminals.
Citicizing Relentlessly Ruthlessly
all believers in saving Trees

even Joe Biden dying of cancer in bed
even women seeking medical care
even popular singers incurring their ire
even all previous Presidents
even Social Security paying their rent.

Bizarre American Behaviors
now favor rich white Dictators.
Who will raise the Confederate Flag again
Over Capitols of rural Red States
Down with Old Glory, Up with Hate.

 

734.

"The Great Genius is
A man who can do the
Ordinary thing
When everybody
Else is going crazy."
- Ted Berrigan

 

735.

Cloud Castles on the sea
     home to dreamy reveries—
seen by Poetry's
          fancy transparent filigrees
of charming fragrant memories.

 

736.

     Snapshots of war on TV
          snippets of car crashes
latest news about rich celebrities
more commercials to sell you more things
leading to ten sporting events: Again.

Splashes of information keep us hypnotized.
     In the New School of the Trivial
          we are Sophomores in stride
flip-flopping in flash editing
swamped Dummies in Data Tsunamis.

 

737.

Rain ing IMAGES roll
a r o u n d on the Words.
    NOthing Special:
Listening to lectures.
Picturing the Page.

 

738.

The wallpaper of our lives
is faded and grease stained
     marked by our crayons of banality
smeared with bourgeois kitsch crap.
     Needing Repainting Fast!

 

739.

Asked for his comments,
     He paused, looked within,
          Strategized,
Responded dryly:
     "No comment at this time."

 

740.

Read Ted Berrigan's Sonnets
from 1964— a brainy Bore.
Muddled random tiny thoughts
     absent of meaningfulness
scattered around on clumsy round floors.

Ideas popping like green popcorn
on the twisted streets of hip New York
pointless lines on pills of speed
running round dead orange olive trees
bizarre concoctions of decoying imagery.

In some ways silly FUN, like listening
to the confused chatter of a drugged insane
     Prophet of impossible dry rain
mumbling inanities before the Cisco Kid.
Berrigan clearly not a clear Billy Collins.

 

741.

Sleepless in Sunset Suburbs

my mind working overtime:
     a speeding bike without brakes
a rolling rock tumbling down
a super-alert consciousness drained
     a can't-quit-motor speeding on

 

742.

Iran Bombed into Itself

Listening to the News
about the war in Iran:
Israel demolished the
Shi'a Regime's military, the
USA bombed it's nuclear sites.

I'm not upset to see Iranian
proxies and the Iranian Shi'a
Regime undermined. Proxy
terrorists like Hamas, Hezbollah,
Levant, Baathists, [Sunni-Isis-Al-Qaeda]

Have openly stated their aims
to terrorize and destroy
Israel, the USA, and other Nations.
          Good Riddance!

Nevertheless, since Iran posed
no immediate existential threat
to the USA; King Tump's actions,
without Congressional approval,
is further evidence of his
incompetence and ignorance.

     Likewise, our own Christian Nationalists

Seek to Rule us Secular Woke Folks.
     But we don't need or want
More religious zealots In Charge;
Favoring a Separation of Church and State.
Religions are sometimes a violent disgrace.

6/22/2025

 

743.

          It is hard
     to think poetically
with war destroying lives
and civilian property—
     malevolence alive

 

744.

     buzzing screeching chipper
clawing branches into chyme
for digesting compost piles—
     Sunday morning
          Screaming Sounds Slam!

 

745.

     We were ashamed
          of piles of plastic
Keurg' cups waste—
returned to using
Mr. Coffee maker: No Cups!

 

746.

     Hometown poets
     at Ghost Town Open Mic—
sharing insights about their life
and living together in space and time
our environs shape connected minds.

 

747.

Mill Plain Boulevard
          a business bonanza
     of stores galore—
money in my wallet
but I did not shop.

 

748.

Downtown Vancouver
     few places to park
expensive parking fees
     for slices of space—
          so I walked farther.

 

749.

Chunky spicy salsa
fresh warm chips
     gorging on carbohydrates—
then adding beer, rice,
      beans and tacos...
Getting High!

 

750.

    Along the Newport docks
tourists gather in restaurants
shop in kitschy seaside shops—
     for Oregon summer memories
     draw them back, temporarily.

 

751.

     Poets I've never met
except in books out of print—
     Readers reach back in time
Capturing other places and times,
     Mindful of our different kinds.

 

752.

    fast moving clouds...
she passes him by!
he wonders why?
    lightening in the skies...
she knows he's a spy

 

753.

Message from her eyes,
gun in her hands—
    Pounding on her door
she hides on the floor,
    cocks her pistol, ready for war.

 

754.

        Stopping his yelling
    realizing his harm—
his children crying
scaring his wife,
his angry outbursts a sharp knife.

 

755.

cutting up Smooth Cat's Ears:
    pulling them out
    from the drying lawn—
bend down
    hard ground

 

756.

We speak about Somethings,
     Choose not to point instead.
Tracing the arc of ugly innuendos
And standing on subtle inflections read;
     To find by saying what went unsaid.

 

757.

Come, my friend,
take my poem,
out to play. Say
what you think,
          yea or nay.

 

758.

A Baby is not a Teenager

You can flash-freeze fertilized human embryos
and keep them in a liquid nitrogen tank
for 20 years at -255C and keep them "viable."
But, any real Baby will quickly die at -55C.
     Embryos are not a Baby.

 

759.

The Universe is not round or square
more like spilled water spraying willy-nilly;
     God's plan is thus more lie Jackson Pollock's
drip-dropping semi-randomly;
not like Edward Weston photographing Peppers.

 

760.

          round and round
     the clock hands
move so slow, and yet
     we all know how
          fast time flows

 

761.

Understandably, clearly at times, Reality
a doomed project, almost unimaginable,
beyond our beyonds, senseless,
     no rhyme or reason or resolution,
bleeding all meaning from our brains.

 

762.

Thailand foods for lunch,
     Tom Ka chicken soup,
     salad with peanut dressing—
Good conversations with my wife,
we are so fortunate in our life.

     Sleepy after a large lunch meal;
Perfect Tai cuisine a Pure Tai Cafe—
Gloomy overcast summer day
No sunshine, few shadows,
     Plenty for us to do later that day.

 

763.

Rolling Over plucking sound waves
     Of pulsing Escalay (Waterwheel)
By Kronos String Quartet on CD MP3s.
     Melting into Bach on piano.
Edging on Glass to Mishima

 

764.

Mountains in Voyager Cards:
Two of Cups: Equilibrium
Two of Crystals: Equanimity
Two of Worlds: Reflection
          Priestess II

 

765.

Treat Tarot Cards like ritual, magical,
spiritual, Integrative, Hands-On!,
Valued Self-World Exploration Tools.
Learn the Five Fold Way
Random Images Can be Organized

 

766.

"How Do I Love Thee?"
     Let Us count the Ways!
We express our love and respect
Via everyday Ways:
List of 101 Ways:________

 

767.

I heard trees in bloom
I listened to a big rock talk
                    I saw an echo shout
I grabbed an invisible ghost
I arrived late, too soon

 

768.

Much ado about Something
happening next door. Mr. Shull,
     he died today! Their taking his
body away now. His funeral...
probably next week. Are you going?

 

769.

The clone of the Red Moon
on that Japanese wood-block art scroll:
a drawing of smoke over a campfire
showing a pot of boiling water, and
people drinking hot tea on a scroll.

 

770.

I must work harder than a hummingbird
who vigorously flaps his wings, while,
     delicately, sticking his tiny tongue
into the snatch scented sweets of a
     female flower of Nasturtium.

 

771.

Boxes of insects for sale
on Lowe's garden shelves:
     ladybugs, praying-mantis.
          Guards to eat our enemies,
          Guards to preserve our leaves.

 

772.

hit a dry spell
in my daily writing
     due to being stoned
     on Columbia Gold
          sativa cannabis

 

773.

     sneezing
summer tickle
     in sensitive nose
blowing nose
     runny nose

 

774.

A Sunny Spot

I find comfort in Quiet
in beauty unvieled
in a book of photographs
in a poet's thoughts
         in a sunny spot

I find comfort in a cool day,
being too hot turns me off.
I relish a cool breeze,
sipping coffee and cream,
          in a sunny spot

My back yard
     enclosed
hedged in
vertical gardens
          a sunny spot

Reflecting
     no adversity
suburban banality
ho hum neutrality
          a sunny spot

A private porch
     comfy lawn chairs
Japanese fir garden
fuchsia's all blooming
          a sunny spot

buttered bread
     blended cheese
cooked to perfection.
Lunching outdoors
          a sunny spot

The hard shadows
     of early afternoon.
A Big Robin hopped
out of view.
          a sunny spot

 

775.

He mulled long on "Mu"
with every pore of his mind-being.

The Buddha Nature of the dog
growled at the intruder.

The dog barked at the temple door.

 

776.

Nothing superfluous
Nothing extra
Nothing lacking—
          the big puzzle
     remained half-done

 

777.

daybreak somewhere
          in July—
raspberries ripen
          slowly
     sweeter

[July in the Garden Anthology]

 

778.

Moment to Moment
non-stop rain storm—
quickly the canyon river
          rises and rages
     Destruction.

 

779.

Body and mind
dropped away—
as he jumped
     from the tenth floor
          open window.

 

780.

Not high, writing, not drunk,
writing, not stoned, writing.
My sober mind, my sober brain,
     more productive, more aware...
          Writing!

 

781.

humidity hampers
my enthusiasm...
          dragged down
     into lethargy;
sweat on my face

 

782.

July Concerts in the Park,
at the pier,
in restaurants;
     people dancing
          drinkers watch.

 

783.

The reasons are weak,
The justifications faulty,
     The liar is stumbling.
The suspect should shut up;
Get a lawyer, plead the 5th.

 

784.

Drowned in a Texas flood
hundreds dead in the mud,
houses and cars washed
down river. Can't they
     predict a flood?

 

785.

hills, valleys, wind
summer, sun, Bright

dusty trails, Shade
sipping water
delighted by wildflowers

 

786.

with my wife
side by side
     centered in our world
we walk and talk
          covered in fog

 

787.

Father Priest once
counseled me—
     while on my knees
in the dim confessional box.
     Stopped kneeling for sanity!

 

788.

Outdoor market crowd
at Ester Short Park—
          boy plays
     electric piano
on Sundays, for tips.

 

789.

Old Feral Heathen
downtown Vancouver Pub
sold and closed—
     people seeking
          new jobs.

 

790.

          Listening to poets
     read their creations
at the Open Mic—
inspired and humbled
     double delight

 

791.

     rain on the road
on my windshield
on my mind—
     hawk eyed
          slowing down

 

792.

     Punched in the face
he flopped to the ground
dazed and stunned—
I walked away
     ashamed of my cruelty

 

793.

"What language does God Speak?"
asked the girl.
     Jesus ansered,
     politely,
"Yo solo hablaba con Dios en Español."

 

794.

shirtless, dusk, Buck Moon
emerging, Huge, Over the Cascades,
mule deer antlers sprouting

dogs barking, campers talking,
sitting on the warm ground

 

795.

On the threshold of Nothing:
he groaned, sat up,
pointed his hand up,
shook a little, mumbled,
then died in his hospital bed.

 

796.

Birthday party for two.
One turned 15 the other 62.
They blew out the candles,
Said goodbye to the years,
that brought them here.

 

797.

hot dry wind
shook the windows
dried the leaves
flung pine branches
a deadly breeze

 

798.

graduating:
saying goodbye
walking away
gathering memories
nothings the same

 

799.

Change
your surroundings, place,
circumstances, friends,
beliefs, ideas;
unfolding a new self-brain.


 

 

 

800.

Voices from California


was this...
Robinson Jeffers in Carmel
Henry Miller in Big Sur
Alan Ginsberg in Berkeley
Thomas Mann in Pacific Palisades
Charles Bukowski in Hollywood


was he...
Mark Twain in Virginia City
Jack London in Oakland
Langston Hughes in Carmel
Robert Hass in Oakland
Thomas Cleary in San Fran


Was she...
Diane Di Palma from San Fran
Jane Hirshfield from San Fran
Ina Coolbrith from Independence
Marjorie Perloff from Palo Alto
Joan Didion from Hollywood


was that...
Snoop Dog from Compton
Raymond Chandler from Los Angeles
John Steinbeck from Salinas
Van Morrison from Fairfax
Carlos Castaneda in the Mohave


Was that...
Maya Angelou in San Fran
Tracy Kay Smith in Fairfield
Kim Dower in Los Angeles
Adrienne Rich in Santa Cruz
Kate Braverman in Los Angeles


Was he...
Deng Ming Dao from Oakland
Lawrence Ferlinghetti from San Fran
William Randolf Hearst from San Simeon
Gary Snyder from the Sierra Hills
John Muir from Martinez


Was that...
Alan Watts in Druid Heights
Czeslaw Milosz in Berkeley
William Soroyan in Fresno
Walt Disney in Hollywood
Yvor Winters in Palo Alto


Was he...
David Meltzer in Oakland
Dana Gioia in Los Angeles
Isaac Bonewits in Berkeley
Bret Harte in Arcata
Kenneth Rexroth in San Fran


Was she...
Ursula K. Le Guin from Berkeley
Addie Lucia Ballou from San Fran


Was he...
William Everson from Selma
Lew Welch from San Francisco
Robert Duncan from SanFran
Juan Filipe Hererra from San Diego
Philip Levine from Fresno

 

Was that...
Gary Soto from Fresno

 

And, who have I missed?
Send to me, and I'll include herewith.
Text Press Email


 

 

Bundled Up:
Quintains, Pentastichs, Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

Poems 1-99
Poems 100-199
Poems 200-299
Poems 300-399
Poems 400-499
Poems 500-599
Poems 600-699
Poems 700-799
Poems 800-899
Poems 900-1,000
Quintains Research

 

801.

preferring clarity
over cocktails—
I vividly remember
headache and hangover
     vomiting

 

802.

white moth
          fluttering
     down and up...
breezes in leaves
of dogwood trees

 

803.

     slept 13 hours
     till Sunday noon—
yesterday's heat
and humidity
exhausted me

 

804.

July sunbath Sweat
drowsy Lazy noon
     beer cool Sip—

reading Naked Lunch
     nearly naked myself

 

805.

Cherries bowl Seeds
Stems Compost can

Sweet juicy Succulent—

     one by one
seeds extracted tongue

 

806.

"How many toes does God have?"
asked Allen Ginsberg.
     Jesus did not know
     and replied:
"Nunca lavé los pies de Dios."

[Allen Ginsberg, Diamond Bells,
1996. Jesus washing his disciples
feet; John 13.]

 

807.

Hands down
he's the best.
     The GOAT
of his generation.
Who? Why?

 

808.

     Rivers meeting
Willamette-Columbia
in Portland south—
     cargo ships load
          grain in Kalama

 

809.

The temperature climbed
          to 99.
Sweating in the shade
          sipping lemonade—
Bill Evans on piano.

 

810.

The Dao exists in sparrows
in the grapevines
     where the path narrows
on to pavers and bricks
spotted with white bird shit.

 

811.

     The sacred surfaced
     through the profane.
The Sacred steered
     the Profane
into profound silence.

 

812.

Raise the blinds
See the world!
     Asked for a sign:
Chokei lifted his hossu and
     whacked the window.

 

813.

Crape myrtle, brilliant red, bursting forth;
     Hiding the garden.
Some days, only the Garden, entire, serene;
Yet, hiding from sight, shy, single plants.
Seeing Both, seldom, but as One.

Sweat poured from my startled brow,
Dripping on the dry earth;
     And all became Sunshine
And shadows of surprise unraveling.
          Blessed Be!

 

814.

spiders crawling
in nooks and crannies
sheltered from the sun—
          webs hanging
     between some shrubs

 

815.

shoveling compost
between bins
     manure added
          raked in...
covered with straw

 

816.

cool morning
mid-July...
          birds silent
     dogs sleeping
pale blue skies

 

817.

"Nothing stops for us"
Blaise Pascal pondered
between a limitless past and future
our finite foundationless lives
slip by, forgotten, unblessed.

[Blaise Pascal, Pensées, #38,
A. J. Krailsheimer's translation,
1996.]

 

818.

     What are daily happenings
to people near or far
as the stuff of their lives
as the hum of their occasions
     disappear as Autumn falls.

 

819.

I seldom think about:
relics of Jesus in Cathedral vaults,
his bloody face traced on a robe,
his wife and kids left behind, or
how much money his Brand rolls in.

 

820.

The smoke of old
     incense devotions
cleansing the nose
opening the mind to
     a Heart of Jasmine.

 

821.

not a hermit
not a monk
     not a loner stuck
in a hut and rut
trying to do too much alone

 

822.

March rain on the bus stop roof,
cars splash gutter puddles.

Will I ever see King Tides again?
Raincoat, rubber boots, who knows.

Colder Winters will come and go.

 

823.

          I often found
     the truths of Zen
while walking, while gardening,
while sitting, while listening,
while not reading or talking.

 

824.

Approaching noon
     on a Bandon dune, in June,
my Seydel harmonica in tune,
     my melodious sounds
carried by the winds away.

 

825.

     On transience I reflect;
but such thoughts pass
          like leaves in the river
     like sounds in the dark
like snow melting on grass.

 

826.

"For him I sing,
I raise the present on the past,
(As some perennial tree out of its roots, the present on the past.)
With time and space I him dilate and fuse the immortal laws,
To make himself by them the law unto himself."

- Walt Whitman, For Him I Sing

 

827.

Lonely hours alone
on this hot July day
     blinds drawn down
          fans humming along...
family 2,000 miles away.

 

828.

     Vanishing decades
apparitions past;
or a flash of fireworks
     gone in a blast...
myself, a lot like that.

 

829.

all my previous
lives and selves
evolving me
     are gone, ended, placeless,
          faded realities

 

830.

The Floating World
beyond my reach
     Words flew by
like lines of geese...
     I could not think.

 

831.

I noticed the shadows
of yesterday's shade
     appearing tomorrow
unwanted, troubling,
          escaped renegades.

 

832.

     The Turner Diaries with
          hard core Nazi ideology for
alienated white guys loving guns...
Timothy McVeight and Terry Nichols
     on the OKC truck bomber run.

[Oklahoma City, Murrah Building,
Bombing, April 19, 1995.]

 

833.

a bit jittery
          uneasy
     feeling jumbled
something off
          shaky self

 

834.

"Make America Plaid Again"
his cap said.
     Two skinny geezers
on a daybreak walk
     talked and talked.

 

835.

Blaise Pascal's Wager
     insufficient
to keep the Catholic Church
from placing his Pensées on
     the banned books list.

 

836.

Either? at Death...
     "Eternal annihilation
     or eternal misery."
Pascal's limited Options?
How about reincarnation?

[Pascal's Pensées, #84.]

 

837.

I'll stick with
"the giddier collective gallop"
dancing on the mirrors of the seas—
          just here and now
     crowned by cherished memories.

[W. H. Auden, Sea and the Mirror]

 

838.

in every moment
today is created anew—
          pristine possibilities
     changing opportunities
          depending on you

 

839.

     what to keep in
     what to keep out
crucial for communication—
     yet very difficult
to explain without doubts

 

840.

     he was famous
     for being famous—
but good looks fade,
few successes remain.
He lost his 15 minutes of fame.

 

841.

Using others, in others,
through others...
     I became myself,
an amplified identity;
     a newly emerging me.

 

842.

Yes, life can be,
Yes, yes, true; and
No, no, false; and
     tainted remains of failures
     bitterness, death, and loss.

 

843.

     In the hurly burly
          of real life—
perplexities intertwined
with reason's intensity
     sharpening a dull knife.

 

844.

     sham and drab
realities of the everyday
ordinary trivialities
     smothering me...
hoping for novel happenings

 

845.

The great Painting exists
          because
we see it, we think about it,
we don't hear it, we frame it,
it hangs on a museum's wall.

 

846.

"My propositions are elucidatory in this way:
he who understands me finally recognizes
them as senseless, when he has climbed out
through them, on them, over them. (He must
throw away the ladder after climbing in.)"

- James Laughlin, Wittgenstein's Ladder,
A Commonplace Book of Pentastichs
."

 

847.

Lao Tzu crossed the checkpoint
at the top of the ridge,
     after he left his manuscript
of the Daodejing in the hands
of the illiterate border guard men.

He headed down the road
into mountain valleys
          covered in snow—
     disappeared into eternity
     were everyone someday goes.

 

848.

That campfire that night
     cracked and sparked,
erasing a bit of the dark.
          Sending smoke signals
to warn the sentries on stars.

 

849

     coming into view
          something new
so I suddenly stopped
stood still as a rock
stunned, amazed, shocked

 

850.

     my generation
Boomers born—
          Dying away
     everyday
in 2025 July

 

851.

Quuiich totem pole
Umpqua River
Discovery Center Museum
          Hello
Dai-Niishanax

[Reedsport, Oregon]

 

852.

     Westport surfers
watching the swells
maneuvering tactically—
          rocky jetty
     guiding fishing boats

 

853.

book unopened
hidden potential
covered insights
closed ideas
     Waiting...

 

854.

Scores of steep staircases
from Lincoln City down to the sea—
          yes, perhaps,
     the subtle truths,
revealed on a walk in the surf.

 

855.

ready for walking
     around ten blocks
          without any talk...
silently I stalked
footsteps once crossed

 

856.

Calm and withdrawn
     hidden in Hartford offices,
the invisible poet's secret life,
eschewing poetic notoriety locally—
Wallace Stevens certifiying bonds.

 

857.

sorrows multiply
like flies on dead flesh—
     the young warriors died
     for a homeland's pride
below artillery fire

 

858.

     Yes, I must choose
who to read, who to study,
whom not to read, whom to ignore..
     based on my limited time
to explore a pinch of the Canon.

[Harold Bloom, The Western Canon]

 

859.

     Parties by the river
at sunset in July—
Latin Band percussion
synchronized on time;
     people smiling, drinking wine.

 

860.

     Religious obscurities
one tiny candle in the dark
our indifference to knowing it.
Hidden Somethings in the night,
     few truths in Reason's light.

[Pascal, Pensées, #439]

 

862.

Words on a pixeled screens
          puzzling me—
sidebar boxes selling things
alluring images marketing
things unmatched to my real needs.

 

863.

Noticed a long black bug
crawling up my shirt—
          accidental tourist
          on for the ride.
I brushed it aside.

 

864.

All the Angels
on the tip of a pin
     dancing wildly
side by side celebrating
Angels in the Architecture.

 

865.

          The Ordinary
amplified by Imagination
bloomed occasionally
          colored creatively
     oddities in full flower.

 

866.

I never spoke with Aliens,
never saw their silver saucers,
never was violated by them,
never transported by magic beams...
Thankfully, they did not notice me.

 

867.

carefully crafted
lines created
by a poet's mind;
     her feelings, her doings,
          her place in time

 

868.

asphalt Road dry
—Cold Breeze daybreak

Shoes step-by-step Slow
     Empty streets Alone

—Dogs bark hello

 

869.

Stopped reading the Bible
before I was twenty.
Heard all the old Jewish lore before;
     repetition unnecessary.
Better wisdom from other shores.

 

870.

keeping warm
—on this cool morn;
reading Daoist lore,
sipping tea..
Moments of Yin...

 

871.

aching back
stiff and sore
slowly moving—
          counting my blessings
     walked out the door

 

872.

I'm seldom anxious,
seldom bored,
deal with inconsistency,
benefit from Reason...
Pascal's life was harder than mine.

[Pascal, Pensées, #24]

 

873.

I'd like to know—
     have you ever tasted the sea
     swallowed some surf
     spit out some sand
felt rain at the misty shore?

 

874.

     hoping the worms
will multiply
eat up garbage
aerate the soil—
          expense justified

 

875.

          he handed me
a handsome Buck
pocket knife—
          a birthday gift
for an 80 year life

 

876.

we watched two dogs
for ten days:
endless chasing
          tossed
     tennis balls

 

877.

As I watered rows of beans
what I heard reminded me of
what quiet streams said to trees
what music softly lifted me
what sounds were noticed by me.

 

878.

"Now that he's old and foolish
his hands smell of mortality.
Wash it as he may, he can't regain
the scent of the time when lovely
hands longed to touch and caress it."

- James Laughlin, His Hand,
A Commonplace Book of Pentastichs
.

 

879.

her whispering lovingly
          encouraged me
     to enjoy intimacies
of bodies pulsing
beneath tall trees

 

880.

In July 2025,
I read "On the Road"
by Jack Kerouac circa 1957.
     I've also crossed America,
many times, in my own way.

 

881.

Cities rise. Suburbs grow.
     People come. Old folks go.
The river shrinks, the flow slows.
Trees removed, concrete poured,
     Orchards gone, history ignored.

 

882.

Rose of Sharon in bloom
white circles of color
in green leaves at noon
          backyard artistry
     in dry July.

 

883.

The unfenced world
     of pines and berries
     along the back roads
by a Chehalis River Fork
behind empty Pe Ell streets.

 

884.

Images shine:
     crystal glasses
     filled with wine;
her lipstick pinkish,
     licking her lips.

 

885.

the sun is gone
so cold and dark
stars emerge
          owls talk
     we walk

 

886.

     Weeds in a field
Pressed flowers in a box
Wisteria in a Huáng Quán scroll
Camillas in an Anne Pratt illustration
     Flowers in the artist's wet brush

 

887.

from the Seeds
Roots, stems, leaves

     Flowers emerge
staccato Origins timed
by the angles of the Sun

 

888.

They sent Tammy home
          for hospice care:
Hypokalemia, Rhabdomyolysis,
Elevated d-dimer, Elevated troponin...
weakness, bleeding, fading: Can't Last!

 

889.

     We kissed hard lustfully
(lips, mouth, tongue, titties)

like starving dogs devouring
bowls of juicy meat;
we loved with fingers eagerly

 

890.

Father, Son, and Holy Ghost
are not enough
for a Spiritual Family.
Where are Mother, Daughter,
and Legions of Wee Folk?

NeoPagans: Druids & Wiccans

 

891.

I'm too old
for any real Destiny
except for Death
creeping up to me, tagging Me:
"Your It!"

 

892.

Sitting somewhat aimlessly
reading Shoptaw's commentary
on John Ashbery's poetry
as a summer's Friday eve
slippped quietly over me.

- John Shoptaw, On the Outside
Looking In: John Ashbery's Poetry

 

893.

"secular lines of high
sonic resonance"
baffled me, embarrased
my sophomoric sensibility
stretched my cluelessness

- John Stoptaw

 

894.

As clear as misrepresentation
          can be
floating vocabulary
clever asides for the Hip and Gay
     allusions jumping ship

 

895.

Doomed to repeat
     like footsteps from feet
themes familiar, ideas fixed,
     fixed forms fenced in,
same old, same old, petty sins.

 

896.

Tell the truth straight
     with a Dickersonian Slant
          angled implications
sliding slippery clarifications
before the the Court of Poetry.

 

897.

Did not want it to happen
but pushed along reluctantly
pulling back hard angrily;
          wrenched free finally,
     ran free from misery.

 

898.

The experience of experiences:
     levels above, levels below.
How felt, how seen, how known.
     What happened when
my Karate kick broke my toe.

 

899.

Most of the "Lakes"
in the Northwest are
just large reservoirs, that
     concrete dams do store,
for spinning turbines more.

Bonneville, Dalles, John Day
Dams alive and humming
     Kilowatt Gargantuans
          powering Oregon cities
running every day and night.

 

 

 

 

900.

Dogen knew:
mountains became sages
rivers became teachers
monks became Buddhas
     dogs barked at strangers

 

Bundled Up:
Quintains, Pentastichs, Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

Poems 1-99
Poems 100-199
Poems 200-299
Poems 300-399
Poems 400-499
Poems 500-599
Poems 600-699
Poems 700-799
Poems 800-899
Poems 900-1,000
Quintains Research

 

901.

I consulted the Tarot
     "how can I write
     better poetry?"
The Answer
     was encouraging:

Mastery: The Sage of Wands
Aspiration: The Star, #17
Balancing: Control, #8
Rejoice: Woman of Cups
Reward: Ten of Worlds

 

902.

"When the water-freezing
Winter arrives
The floating reeds look rooted,
As if stillness
Was their own desire."
- Onono Komachi, Ink Dark Moon

 

903.

Jesus walks in San Francisco,
     Reborn Again!
He looks like Walt Whitman
Singing songs to his many Selves
Helping homeless Sleepers on Skid Row.

The Gods are distorted mirrors of men;
The Goddess the Mother of All that Is.
     Born and reborn in every land
With Prophets like Walt Whitman, or Brother Everson,
Or Joseph Smith, or Chang San-Feng.

     Reinventing Divine Sons and Daughters
Given by the Dao to hopeful souls;
Desirous of health and rest,
Hoping for happiness in our life of toil.
     Yes, Jesus sings in San Francisco.

Mayor Moscone asked the Jesus in Jeans,
"Do you enjoy Frisco Bay?"
      Jesus answered,
'Julio es demasiado frío y brumoso;
Prefiero los días más cálidos de Alcapulco
."

- Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass,
Song to Myself

 

904.

He was a hot head.
     She was cold as ice.
It was the end of the line.
     We are armies of the night.
They were hard pressed.

Consciousness rises as language grows,
Metaphors expand the dimensions of the Known.

Cars are gas guzzlers.
Forests were enchanting ghosts.
     Men were oxen on yokes.
Maps were essential Keys
     Rivers were twisting snakes.

This was that, figuratively.
That was this, comparatively.

[The Gushen Grove Sonnets]

 

Metaphors are unceasingly born
Growing like leaves in February
From Imaginative fecund roots
Connecting disconnected images
of That and This, figuratively.

 

905.

     Subjects multiply...
topics of discussion,
the Self at the Center,
the slave let free,
the theme of the poem.

 

906.

          flaws in things
     speak perfections
stimulate reflections...
          she shredded
     holes in her jeans

 

907.

About the Greeks and Chinese
I eagerly read
their writings from 550 BCE;
      nothing interesting for me in
      the falling walls of Jericho.

 

908.

          the fallen flowers
from the fuchsia pot
lie as withering
red-white fragments
     on porch spots

 

909.

          whether or not
     to embrace her now
and press my case
     for sudden pleasures
          and juicy tastes

 

910.

     Keep going!
          Never give Up!
Carry your own Goals!
Carry your own luggage...
     Carry On!

 

911.

"I do not remember the number
     of our kisses
but I cannot forget the green
     blur of a falling star
upon your trembling eyelids."

[Kenneth Rexroth, I Do Not
Remember the Number
]

 

912.

empty
page of blue lines...
     notebook silent
          wordless sonnet
underlined

 

913.

I've read thousands of
     haiku poems;
thankfully, they all were
     only three lines long.

Concise, direct, earthy, plain,
     a Ringing Gong!!!

[Haiku and Senryu]

 

914.

          I was educated in
East Los Angeles Catholic Schools:
Saint Alphonsus Elementary School, and
Cantwell High School.
     Language, Math, Physical Science,

     Religion, Manners, and Rituals ruled.
Strangely, little or no Biology,
Art, Music, or Philosophy.
A rather elitist, a uniformed Tribe,
Taking Catholic sensibilities in stride.

 

915.

Nearly all the poets
     I have read (since 1962)
     Are All now Dead (circa 2025).
I'm 80 myself now, Yes!
Close myself to becoming Dead.

 

916.

          What does today offer?
Bees and birds and a dog's tongue.
Clouds and winds and a white sun.
Peaches and bread and a coffee mug.
     Familiar rituals on a prayer rug.

 

917.

Hey! I've been thinking about you!
          African dancers
lip-syncing a London Beat tune
     on a Facebook reel;
really stone cool.

 

918.

          Samsara is Nirvana?
     10,000 Things are Nothing?
Past and future are gone (Empty?).
The Present is gone in a Flash.
What's left? Samsara won't last.

 

919.

          Your next best move
     matters much more
than you last mistake.
     Push forward with Resolve:
          Move on, Move On!

 

920.

     "First thought, best thought"
was one of Trungpa's dictums,
e.g., Kerouac's work flowed unfettered.
However, for most eager poets,
     Second thoughts may sound better.

 

921.

          Write down the poem,
     type it out, share on
a webpage or chapbook Out.
Speak out your poem, Shout!
Be an entertainer, perform live Out.

 

922.

The edge of dissatisfactions
cut into my restless feelings;
     stinging like a spider bite,
     aching like a heartburn's vice...
Damn! Another sleepless night!

 

923.

The jetty smelled like kelp

     Lichens on rocks and docks
Fishermen smoking musky pot

     Catching colorful ling cod
Pleased ... thanking the gods

 

924.

His white shirt and pale blue tie
inside his herringbone gray coat
was my professor's sartorial style.
He expounded on Existentialism,
being quite careful about Being.

 

925.

     Poetry is a poor business
and the rewards are quite scanty,
books don't sell, few paid readings...
Better off financially working Christmas
part-time for a Big Box Store.

 

926.

He spit on the ground,
sneezed in a Kleenex,
coughed in his palm,
lost his breath a little...
     August head cold.

 

927.

Crawling out the hole
dug by the busy mole;
he looked around, frowned,
then burrowed back down
into his cozy tunnels below.

 

928.

She said "maybe."
He said "please."
     She said "yes."
          He said "let's go."
They headed out to Cape Arago.

 

929.

Editors say "Thanks,
     but No." Tenth rejection!
The cold shoulder, indeed,
is discouraging, but
     I just keep writing poetry.

 

930.

"There is a pleasure in the pathless woods,
There is a rapture on the lonely shore,
There is society, where none intrudes,
By the deep sea, and music is its roar:
I love not man the less, but Nature more."

- Lord Byron, Childe Harold's Pilgrimage

 

931.

Asking myself "Why?"
Which software to master?
What better poems to write?
Why Not! Is a good answer.
As long as there's time.

 

932.

The Pleasures of Masochistic Conundrums

the fact is that some philosophers enjoy
the rush of mental masochism,
the bondage to fashionable ideas,
the titillations of traditions,
the painful flagellation with

the keen, clear, sharp cutting words,
the bowing to Mistress Logic,
the humiliation of utter confusion,
the euphoria of the games,
the illusions of obsessions,

the charms of the fantastic
the theaters of thought alluring,
the submission to
the non-experiential concepts,
the fetishes of errors and illusions.

- Mike Garofalo

Gushen Grove Sonnets

Quintain Sonnet Forms

 

933.

Double Visions

An eager face staring into the Rich silence
Of mirrored space devoid of mind;
Not projecting or connecting, but reflecting.
Supreme non-fictions, Things
Naked as they are, as they are.

Inevitably, as sunshine blares on stones,
Green erupts from Brown.
Curiosity Swings across the Mind
past junkyards of ideas, peeling metaphors,
rusting rhymes, and concrete cliches,

Into the Center of Imagination City!
We are as we are:
Twofolds, Fourfolds, Eightfolds of
Realities and Possibilities.
Pushing on. Pushing on!

 

934.

     Money in my wallet
Photos in my cellphone
Fish in the freezer
Water in a reservoir
     Words in a dictionary

 

935.

     Most often
I play my harmonica
at home, alone,
in a fun zone, free,
listening, exploring creatively.

 

936.

          August means
Watering
Picking beans
Sipping iced tea
Pulling weeds

August: Haiku, Senryu, Tanka

 

937.

PlumCots:
     a bit of sour
     a bit of sweet
plump, firm, juicy.
A UC Davis invention?

 

938.

               sand scoured
          small stones and shells
     smooth and soft...
smelly seaweed was
snatched in by the surf

 

939.

*= Totally Awake :
4 am - 10 am !
     Results Shown =
What's Known ?
Actual Cost Code $

*= On a Saturday .
I left a footnote *
     Left Path Slanted /
Pragmatically Bracketed [
Fill in the blanks ______

 *= Making notes —
revealing, appealing, shared ...
Weighty Subjects #
Rising Higher ^
Here and Now @

 

940.

     NFL Football in August
Preseason TV games on weekly
From all around the USA
          colorful competition
     between 2nd and 3rd String players.

 

941.

I put
my thoughts
in order
     by
fantasies

 

942.

hard-wired to day-light
flowing watery blood
energized by every breath...
          eating peaches—
          summertime

 

943.

'All dharmas are beyond appearances;
All dharmas are beyond disappearance.'
     A koan for those beyond and Not
Attending the 90 day Summer Retreat.
Somewhere, beyond the sea...

Master Dogen,Shobogenzo,
#79, Anjo, Sec: 160]

 

944.

The beans grow by themselves
     I water by drip irrigation
Summertime dry heat stays—
Teahouse seat in willow's shade
     I rest quietly, sip tea

 

945.

Sneezed sixteen times
— Fifteen ants on my books
White moths fluttered fourteen times
— Thirteen times reminded me
To count twelve recent benefits

 

946.

We ate doughnuts from Tonallis.
I smoked pot from the Herbery.
      We drank hot mocha coffees.
I watered pots on the porch—
Wednesday, mid-August, in the Couve.

[Couve = City of Vancouver,
Washington. My home town.]

[August in the Garden Anthology]

 

947.

          cool wind
     August morning ...
smiling, sipping coffee,
smoking Lemon Amnesia
          stoned in

 

948.

Pentastich Footnotes

A quintain restrains my mind
To a field of five lines.
Communications challenged
     by brevity.
It's over after it begins.

How can I make
five line shine,
     stick in readers' minds,
focus consciousness,
bring a bit of delight.

Turn right
on Pentastich Lane
     proceed South
for 1 Mile
to Quintain Cafe.

 

949.

biscuits and butter
     tortillas and cheese
          coffee and cream—
cows graze the green fields
     of iconic Tillamook.

 

950.

Blackberry Stained Hands


Bullards Beach State Park
Bandon Marsh NWR
     Bandon, Oregon
     August 2025

 

 

Blackberry vines
     lined the edge
of the dry Bandon Marsh;
     not one single cloud
flying in the sky

Picking wild blackberries
along the Bandon Marsh;
seagulls splash dive
     in and out of the Coquille River;
east of the 101 bridge.

Families picking
          wild blackberries
     for fresh pies;
slight breeze
across Bandon Marsh.

          hand picked
     fresh ripe berries
hand-fulls of black round morsels
     chugged down
sweet tart summer sun

plucking blackberries
sucking juice
fingers in my mouth—
humming
"numanumanumanuma"

blackberry juice
    dripping from my mouth
        down my shirt—
sweet memories
on the Tongue of the Mind

 

 

[Bandon, Oregon]

[Highway 101 Docu-Poem]

 

951.

Ate beer-battered cod,
          coleslaw, fries, and
shrimp salad as a side;
     at Tony's Crab Shack,
Old Town Bandon, dockside.

 

952.

     older couples
     fill the booths
          eating slowly;
hash browns and ham,
coffee, toast and jam

 

953.

Coquille River
     flows to the sea
          past the jetties;
tides in then out,
river rises then falls.

 

954.

"On dying:
Quickly is better than slowly.
Warm is better than cold. Of course,
Never is better than dead, but don't hold your
breath.
No use in trying."

- Michael Napoliello, 5 Lines in the Quiet Hour, 36.

 

955.

a bit lightheaded
a wobbly walk
a stiff hip...
          watering the garden
     wilting plants

 

956.

Bookshelves of memories:
     traces of wise people met,
          wisdom in pages of text,
once friends for a day or two,
     intimate mentors I once knew.

 

957.

the small branches sagged
the wilting leaves drooped
     by 4 pm it was 100°F;
end of August
          Heat Wave!!!

 

958.

My paternal ancestors from Sicily
my maternal ancestors from Germany;
my brothers and I from Los Angeles
          California Boys and Men
     like our parents: Angelenos.

 

959.

     "TGIF!"
     I once Yelled.
Camped that night
at San Clemente State Park.
Chester and I fished in the dark.

 

960.

     sharp knife
     skilled hands
peeling apples
oranges and potatoes,
     slicing up ham

 

961.

My Buck Knife
is still missing,
somewhere unknown;
     for weeks apples ripening,
          birds flying south.

 

962.

many months of my times
missing from my mind
     tossed tidbits from the Once Me
vague meandering memories
pages of facts often blank

 

963.

Stellar Jay swaying
     on a feeder pole
          pecking corn kernels;
I bite cornbread:
warm and soft.

 

964.

     Am I using it?
     Or, is it using me?
Questioning it's utility.
Tired of its grip on me.
          Will I quit using it?

 

965.

          low on energy
     steady fatigue
tired relaxed
     afternoon nap
          gardener's dreams

 

966.

Karen's sinus pain,
     daily suffering
headaches...
          the Curse of August:
     Allergy Hell.

 

967.

getting closer
goal in sight
got a little to go
grabbed what I wanted
gosh darn I'm good

 

968.

Prior Questions for the Tarot

Picked: August 27, 2026, 3:22 pm:

The Hierophant, X
Seer, Sage of Wands
Growth, Ten of Wands
Actor, Man of Wands
Tower, Transformation XVI

What could this mean?
Depends upon the prior question
          it would seem.
The prior Question of the Querrant
     sets the context
for their understandings gained.

The Reader of the Tarot spread
     Does not know the
Question by the Querrant;
the writer of a poem
does not know the Reader's:
questions, intentions, expectations...

The card spread
gives the Tarot Reader
     Clues as to stories, characters,
ideas, themes, patterns, and lore.

What questions could these Clues answer?

[Tarot Studies]

 

969.

ripe cherries
white moon
August brown
          Queen Anne's Lace
     ripe black berries

[August in the Garden Anthology]

 

970.

Bandon by the Sea, Bordering:
     Coquille River to the North,
          Pacific Ocean to the West,
     Cranberry bogs to the South,
          Forested hills to the East.

[Bandon, Oregon]

[Highway 101 and 1: Docu-Poems]

 

971.

          Forlorn mood
incessant surf
howling winds
thunderous booms...
Bandon sea stacks in sunshine.

 

972.

Senior Year
first day
Skyview High School;
     new classes, friends,
varsity soccer tryouts.

 

973.

write three quintains
     every day,
and in that way
     by paying attention
fine tuning my reflections

 

974.

"What's new?" she asked.
"Plenty" he said.
"What?" she asked.
     "Tell you later" he said.
Didn't see him again for five years.

 

975.

Watered all the plants
     in our home garden.
Autumn tints in August leaves,
     colorful peppers plentiful,
peaches ripen on many trees.

 

 

 

976.

"Moonlight on stubbleshining
     hills
whirls down upon me finer than geometry
     and at my very
eyes it blurs and softens like a dream..."

- Yvor Winters, Nocturne

 

977.

On Mt. Adam's foothills
this bright July day;
     glaciers gleaming gray.
Not a daydream fantasy
real rocks under melting snow.

 

978.

between
two eternities
     my brief life
          is stretched
tight

 

979.

sometimes
stumped
befuddled
fooled—
     seldom so

 

980.

"We think too much and feel to little
     More than machinery
     we need humanity.
          More than cleverness
we need kindness and gentleness."

- Charlie Chaplin

 

981.

we fail
being honest
with ourselves—
     we prefer
overestimating

 

982.

     No ideas but in things 1
     No ideas but in beings 2
No ideas but in words
No ideas without consciousness
No ideas ... Nothing to say

[1. William Carlos Williams.
2. Lawrence Ferlinghetti]

 

983.

     Be Here Now 1
     Be Somewhere Else Now 2
Whatever you'll Be, you'll Be,
Here or There, Now not Later,
          Emerging identity

[1. Ram Dass 2. L. Ferlinghetti]

 

984.

          doctor's office:
     computer screen
spic and span
     tools of the trade...
Waiting in Silence

 

985.

     sore lungs
     sore throat
          too much
cannabis smoke—
coughing regrets

 

986.

let go
or be dragged
to where
you don't
want to go

 

987.

     two eyes
cloudy night
one sniff
moon flowers—
          soft breeze

 

988.

     Robert's Bookshop and
     Bob's Beach Books,
both open today as rain
welcomes readers
          in Lincoln City.

 

989.

MLK Day
     January
          America...
memories of
shared dreams

[January in the Garden Anthology]

 

990.

     Picking up
          brown pine cones
scattered around
     fallen down—
Douglas Fir offspring.

 

991.

A wee bit intoxicated:
     wasted my time
shirked my chores
lost part of my mind.
          Why?

 

992.

The end of the garden
is at the end of the hose,
is at the end of the gardener's
energy and resolve to go.
At the end is the beginning.

 

993.

"Meanwhile the first Being got its Non-Being
Opposite which never had to be there before
This calamity, this accident, this Goof
this Imperceptible Sneak of Dimension,
Some Move-Push tickle, Aleph or Aum

     swallowed before uttered,
one-eyed sparkle, giant glint, any tiny fart
          Thought Impossible
filled every corner of Emptiness with Symmetries of
Impossible Universe with no idea

How Come, & Opposite Possible
     Kosmoses assembled Doubtless—
One Makes two, symmetry's infinite touch
makes Sound bounce, light sees—
          waves reproduce oceans...

[Allen Ginsberg, The Fall of America,
A Methedrine Vision of Hollywood]

 

 

994.

One night I awoke to the sounds
     of rain in the wind.

The clanking of backyard gongs
     till I took them down.

Wiped raindrops off my head.

Opened my fly, pissed on the ground.

Headed back into my bed.

 

995.

Aging provides
more opportunities
for becoming the person
you should
have been."

 

996.

sunburnt face:
stinging
painful
raw
mad about my carelessness

 

997.

"Happiness
not in another place;
not for another hour
but
This Hour."

- Walt Whitman

 

998.

closing the book
at the Chapter's end
bookmarking the place
so when I return
I'll know where to begin

 

999.

Celebrate!
8/31/2025:
1,ooo Quintains
Online by
Mike Garofalo

 

1000.

Bundled Up: Volume 2
Quintains 1,000 - 1,500

 








Bundled Up, Volume 1:
Quintains, Pentastichs, Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

 

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

Poems 1-99
Poems 100-199
Poems 200-299
Poems 300-399
Poems 400-499
Poems 500-599
Poems 600-699
Poems 700-799
Poems 800-899
Poems 900-1,000
Research

 

Bundled Up: Volume 2
Quintains 1,000 - 1,500



 

 

25 Steps and Beyond: Collected Works

At the Edges of the West
Highway 101 and Hwy 1

Quintains, Pentastichs, Tankas

Cuttings: Haiku, Senryu, Brief Poems

At the Edges of the Fertile West
Highway 99 and Interstate 5

Cantos of the Hands

The Gushen Grove Sonnets

The Bottom Line

 

 

Texts Press Publications
Free Online Poetry and Studies

Vancouver, Washington
Texts Press Email

 

 

 

 


 

Quintain Poetry Research
By Mike Garofalo

Quintains, Pentastichs, Tankas
Cinquains, Quintets, Quintillas
Gogyohkas, Limericks, Wakas

Research, Studies, Notes
Bibliography, Links, References
Webpages, Essays, Magazines

Definitions, Examples

 

Jenny Ward Angyal, award-winning tanka poet and author of Earthbound: Tanka-prose & Haibun, Only the Dance: Tanka Threads and Moonlight on Water: Tanka. Her Blog.

 

Bathhouse and Other Tanka. By Ishii Taatsuhiko and Hiroaki Sato.

 

Bucks on Roses: Selected Quintains. By Bill Knott.

 


Bundled Up: Quintains, Pentastichs and Tanka Poems
By Michael Peter Garofalo.
The 960+ Quintains found on this Ad-free webpage make use of punctuation and indentation, frequent rhymes, capitalization, allusions, metaphors, haiku and senryu in unexpected places, typographical variety, and other common Western poetic techniques.

This webpage features over 960+ Quintains, Pentastiches, and Tankas by the author. Often featuring contemporary and Northwest USA settings. Flavored with Buddhist, Zen, Taoist, and Neo-Pagan spiritual themes. Peppered with pragmatism and process philosophy. Some minimalist English language contemporary style Tanka are included. A few longer sequences of quintains on specific topics or settings.

Includes a detailed bibliography, links, notes, resources, quotations, quatrain stylistic considerations, definitions of quatrains, petastiches, and tankas, related research, and the author's writing and publishing objectives.

 

Bundled Up, Volume 1:
Quintains, Pentastichs, Tanka Poems

By Mike Garofalo

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

Poems 1-99
Poems 100-199
Poems 200-299
Poems 300-399
Poems 400-499
Poems 500-599
Poems 600-699
Poems 700-799
Poems 800-899
Poems 900-1,000
Research

Bundled Up: Volume 2
Quintains 1,000 - 1,500


 

 

Cinquain: "A cinquain is a poem or five-line stanza with a rigid syllable count for each line. This modern form was invented by American poet Adelaide Crapsey. The first line contains two syllables, the second line contains four, the third line contains six, the fourth line contains eight, and the last line contains two."

5 Lines in the Quiet Hour. By Michael Napoliello.


Cinquain Poem Examples and Activities


Cinquain - Traditional By Judi Van Gorden

"The cold
With steely clutch
Grips all the land...alack,
The little people in the hills
Will die!”
- Adelaine Crapsey, Winter

 

    only
a cloud of gnats
circling the dirty birdbath
inviting the midges who are
    lonely
- Mike Garofalo, #214

 

 

A Commonplace Book of Pentastichs. By James Laughlin. Edited by Hayden Carruth. Alibris Books, 95 pages, 1998. VSCPL.

 

 

Collage Quintain: Uses quotes from other sources to construct all or part of a quintain stanza or quintain sequence on a theme. Should include reference footnotes to the source of the quote or quotes. Example:

In general, be more specific.
Absolutes squirm beneath realities.
Dogmatists are less useful than dogs.
Roundness is the Holy Shape.
The real "miracle" is cause and effect.

Pulling Onions
Over 1,000 Quips
One Liners, Epigrams
- Mike Garofalo, #221

 

 


Crapsey, Adelaine (1878-1914) American cinquain poems. "The five-line cinquain poetic form she created reflected her life. The first four lines build up "expectancy" only to be followed by a one stress line as an "abbreviated conclusion."

The Crapsey Cinquain and Its Variations.

Cinquain Org

5 Lines in the Quiet Hour. By Michael Napoliello.

 

 

"Listen...
With faint dry sound,
Like steps of passing ghosts,
The leaves, frost-crisp’d, break from the trees
And fall."
- Adelaine Crapsey, November Night

 

"How frail
Above the bulk
Of crashing water hangs,
Autumnal, evanescent, wan,
The moon."
- Adelaine Crapsey, Niagara

 

we were
off the same page
so we stopped and talked
strategized and calmly agreed
with her
- Mike Garofalo, # 170

 

"Still as
On windless nights
The moon-cast shadows are,
So still will be my heart when I
Am dead."
- Adelaine Crapsey, Moon Shadows

 

      Then
wondering, on edge,
would the expensive gift given
communicate the message I wanted to
      Send
- Mike Garofalo, #280

 

 


Dance to the World: Tanka Society of America, Twentieth Anniversary Anthology. Edited by Michael Dylan Welch. 2020, 108 pages.

 


Doggerel Quintains, Limericks, Sexuality

 


English Quintain: "The English quintain follows a rhyme scheme of ABABB, in which the final two lines form a rhyming couplet. Though an English quintain requires an ABABB rhyming pattern, there is no established foot or measure."

"In the golden lightning
Of the sunken sun,
O'er which clouds are bright'ning,
Thou dost float and run;
Like an unbodied joy whose race is just begun."
- Percy Bysshe Shelley

 


[On this webpage: No advertising, no pop-ups, no irrelevant graphics, no cookies sign in, no annoying graphics, no requests for your email, etc. Featuring over 930 quintains, pentastichs, and tankas by Mike Garofalo. Provides good Quintains Research: bibliography, links, resources, quotations, notes. Also, try reading in 80 languages other than English using the Google AI Translator.]

 


Envelope Quintet: "An envelope quintet is a five-line verse in which the inner lines are enclosed by the rhyming outer lines. The rhyme scheme may look like ABCBA, ABCAB, AABAA, or ABBBA (in which the middle lines form a rhyming tercet)."

"An Envelope Quintet is a 5 line verse in which the center lines are enclosed by the rhyme of the outer lines. The elements of the Envelope Quintet are: Stanzaic, a quintet may be a stand alone poem or can be written in any number of 5 line stanzas; meter at the discretion of the poet; rhymed abcba or aabaa or abbba , subsequent stanzas may link or continue the rhyme scheme: linked abcba cdedc or abcba deced / continued is simply abxba cdxdc etc. x being unrhymed."

 

 

288. Envelope Quintain Rhyme Prosody:

A     Always keep an apple
B     By your bed
C     Granny Smith apples green
B     Best for your lazy head
A     As tasty as a Fuji frapple
- Mike Garofalo

 

"Ever since seeing John Wayne
on the movie screen
I've had a thing for the cowboy.
Like them long and lean
and if shy, I don't complain."
- Judi Van Gorder

 

"Opening my toybox after all this time
Those within saw my look and my shame,
They knew of my life, and was not to blame.
So I spoke with, Kanga and Wambi again,
Clearing memories covered in dust and grime"
- Ryter Roethicle

 

"This after-sunset is a sight for seeing,
Cliff-heads of craggy cloud surrounding it.
And dwell you in that glory-show?
You may; for there are strange strange things in being,
Stranger than I know."
- Thomas Hardy, He Prefers Her Earthly

 

 

Exploring the Quintain Essay An excellent essay about Quintains from the Eminent Verse Hub.

 


Famous Tanka Poets in Japan

 

 

Fifteen Quintain Poems. (Oddly, nearly every one of the examples are Quatrains or Tercets??)

 

The Five Hole Flute: Modern English Tanka in Sequences and Sets. Edited by Michael McClintock and Denis M. Garrison. Modern English Tanka Press, 2006. Out of Print.

 

 

Five Line Construction: Gorder, Judi Van (Tinker). Provides a very good explanation of 17 styles of Quintains. For each style-form of quatrain she provides a history of the form, the country of origin, evolution of the form, key aspects of the form, examples of the patricular form, and related information: Arkaham Ballad, Bob and Wheel, Clogyrnach, Crapsey Cinquain, English Quintet, Envelope Quintet, Lira, Limerick, Madsong Stanza, Quintilla, Flamenca or Seguidilla Gitana, Sicilian Quintet, Tanka, Cinquain - Traditional, Waka, and Ya Du.

 

5 Lines in the Quiet Hour. By Michael Napoliello. Short Poems, Random Thoughts, Epigrams, Cinquains and Nonsense. Second Edition. Ouroboros Publishing, 2024, 129 pages. VSCPL.

 


Four Decades on My Tanka Road: The Tanka Collections of Sanford Goldstein. By Sanford Goldstein. Edited by Fran M. Witham. Preface by Patricia Prime. Winfred Press, 327 pages, Second Edition, 2012. Selections from 6 of Professor Goldstein's books: This Tanka World, 1977; Gaijin Aesthetics, 1983; At the Hut of the Small Mind, 1992; Records of a Well-Polished Satchel, 1995; This Tanka World, 2001; and, Encounters in this Penny World, 2005. Includes a selective bibliography, and a biography of Professor Goldstein. Some introductory notes. Over 500 Tanka in this attractive anthology. Good paper and clear crisp print. $22, Paperback. VSCPL. Professor Sanford Goldstein (1925-2023) is often called the "The Grandfather of English Tanka." These Tanka are nearly all in lower case, using only a comma or dash for punctuation, 5 concise lines, mostly free verse style. He includes more gritty, earthy, and intimate aspects of living. These poems reflect many of his experiences while living in Japan for decades. Sometimes, the stark brevity of the Tanka style can lead one to the edge of insight, but they are often too thin to hold up the pants of a deeper understanding. I reviewed this book for Amazon. VSCPL.

 

Gogyohka: Five Line Poetry. By Enta Kusakabe. Translated from the Japanese by Matthew Lane and Elizabeth Phaire. Revised and expanded edition. 2006, 103 pages. "Gogyohka literally translates as "five-line verse". It is an evolution of the great Japanese tradition of short verse, but unlike its predecessors Haiku and Tanka, it has no fixed syllable pattern. The great strength of the Gogyohka form is this simplicity. It is intended to be easy for people to write. Indeed Gogyohka's accessibility and its power to speak directly to the heart and mind stem from the simplicity of its form."


Gogyohka Poems by Mike Garofalo
. Over 1,000 quintain poems.

 


Graceguts Website: Michael Dylan Welch.


Haiku and Senryu Poems by Mike Garofalo. Arranged by the months of the year. Composed from 1998-2025.


Hyper Texts

 

The Ink Dark Moon: Love Poems by Onono Komachi and Izumi Shikibu: Women of the Ancient Court of Japan. Translated by Jane Hirshfield and Mariko Aratani. Vintage, 1990, 240 pages. VSCPL.


Last Mile on the Tanka Road. By Sanford Goldstein. 2023, 140 pages. It was reported that Sanford Goldstein wrote 10-20 Tanka every day. Amazon offers a number of books by this author. Professor Goldstein was a distinguished translator, anthologist, critic, and well known Tanka poet. He passed away in 2023 in Japan at the age of 98. Some people call him "the Father of English language Tanka."

 

 

 


Limerick: "The limerick follows a rhyming scheme of AABBA. The “A” lines are composed using iambic tetrameter, while the “B” lines are written in iambic trimeter. Limericks usually stand alone as a five-line poem and often contain bawdy or humorous subject matter."


Limerick Books at Amazon

 

There Once Was a Limerick Anthology. Edited by Michael Croland. Dover, 2022, 96 pages. VSCL.

 

Little Poems. Edited by Michael Hennessy. Everyman's Library Pocket Poets Series. 2023, 256 pages. Harcover, VSCL.

 

Around the World in Five Lines. By James B. Anstead. 2021, 48 pages.


Limericks by Mike Garofalo
. Over 1,000 quintain poems.

Limerick Examples:

"There was an Old Man with a beard,
Who said, 'It is just as I feared!
Two Owls and a Hen,
Four Larks and a Wren,
Have all built their nests in my beard!"
- Edward Lear

 

"The limerick packs laughs anatomical
Into space that is quite economical.
But the good ones I’ve seen
So seldom are clean
And the clean ones so seldom are comical."
- Edward Lear

 

"God’s plan made a hopeful beginning.
But man spoiled his chances by sinning.
We trust that the story
Will end in God’s glory,
But at present the other side’s winning."
- Oliver Wendell Holmes

 

"There was a young lady named Sally,
Who enjoyed the occasional dally.
She sat on the lap
Of a well-endowed chap,
And cried “Sir! You’re right up my alley!”

 

Crawling out the hole
Dug by the busy mole;
He looked around, frowned,
then burrowed back down
into his cozy tunnels below.
- Mike Garofalo, #927


Mad in Translation: A Thousand Years of Kyoka. By Robin D. Gill. Paraverse Press, 740 pages, 2009. Humorous, witty, naughty, earthy, sexual, bawdy.

 

Martin Buber in Pentastich Light. By Martin Wasserman. XLibris, 2019, 62 pages.

 


Master Class on Quintains
Here are the Eight most common types of quintains:
Cinquain, English Quintain, Limerick, Spanish Quintain,
Pentastich, Sicilian Quintain, Tanka, Envelope Quintet.
"A quintain (also known as a quintet) is any poetic form or stanza that contains five lines. Quintain poems can contain any line length or meter."

 


McClintock, Michael Winston (1950-): Website, Hyper Texts, Anthology, AYSO Flash.

 


Minimalist Tanka. This style of English language
quintain poetry features, primarily:
All words in lower case font; except for Proper Nouns.
Mostly unrhymed, free verse style.
Little or no punctuation.
All text left justified.
Twenty sounds or less.
Not limited to season words
    or key words used in Japanese Tanka.
Mostly contemporary settings.
More like Senryu thematically.

 

Examples fo Minimalist Tankas:

in-breath
out-breath
unconsciously
enables me
to consciously be
- Mike Garofalo, #7

 

alone
on the trail
steep switchbacks
ahead—
my autobiography
- Mike Garofalo, #141

 

unseen
unknown
unspecified
unconnected
unborn
- Mike Garofalo, #222

 

I'm a poet
of a body, not
a poet
of a soul, yes
I sing solo.

- Mike Garofalo, #5



Modern Japanese Tanka. Edited by Makoto Ueda. Columbia University Press, 1996, 288 pages. A rather expensive $115.00 rare book.


A Monchielle Quintain stanza poem is usually six syllables, or iambic trimester, with a rhyme scheme of abcdc."

"I dream in arcane blue
as stars begin to shine,
in sleep, I feel your love
as heart entwines with grace,
I touch the night above"
- Jem Farmer, Arcane Blue

 


Mukhammas (Arabic 'fivefold') "refers to a type of Persian or Urdu cinquain or pentastich with Sufi connections based on a pentameter. And have five lines in each paragraph. It is one of the more popular verse forms in Tajik Badakhshan, occurring both in madoh and in other performance-genres."

 

 

New Tanga: Five Line Poems. By Otteri Selvakumar. 2018, 112 pages.

 

Pansies by D. H. Lawrence. Lawrence, D. H. David Herbert (1885-1930) The Complete Poems of D. H. Lawrence. Wordsworth Poetry, 352 pages, 1994. VSCPL.

 

 

Pentastich: A pentastich is a free verse or blank verse form of quintain poetry. Each five-line stanza contains no rhyme or meter. A stanza or
poem of five lines.

Pentastich Poems by Mike Garofalo. Over 1,000 pentastich poems.

Examples:


sleepless in pajamas
      awake with worries—
mind buzzing
      ideas racing...
            moonless night
- Mike Garofalo, #194

 

Snow on Mt. Saint Helens
Chocolate on a vanilla ice cream cone.
A brown hat on her blonde head.
Green lottery tickets on a white table.
Waitress wiping the counter clean.
- Mike Garofalo, #597

 

In heated afternoons
I sit in the shade;
    reading dead poets
        still alive
in printed words on paper trees.
- Mike Garofalo, #585

 

 

 

Quintet: "A stanza of five lines. Also called a quintain, it appears in various forms, from the clever English limerick (which rhymes aabba and thus relies on a principle of return0; and, the classical Japanese tanka (each line contains a set number of syllables: 5,7,5,7,7)... There seems to be something a little beyond reason and emotionally excessive in punching past the symmetrical quatrain. Thus the possibilities of five unfold..."
- Edward Hirsh, The Essential Poet's Glossary

 

Quintain Poems and Examples



Quintain Poetry - Wikipedia Poems with only five lines: Pentastich, Quintilla, Cinquain, Quintains, Quintets.

 


The Quintain Couplet Poetry Book. By Rebekah Willhite.


Quintain Rhyme Scheme. By Pat Bibbs.

 

 

Quintain in Jousting:
"The quintain (from Latin "fifth"), also known as pavo (Latin "peacock"), may have included a number of lance games, often used as a training aid for jousting, where the competitor would attempt to strike a stationary object with a lance. The common object was a shield or board on a pole (usually referred to as 'the quintain'), although a mannequin was sometimes used."

 

 

 

Random Noun Generator

 

Rhymed Quintain: Using end rhymes, lead rhymes, or alliteration in a Quintain stanza. Example:

time has a rhythm
beyond ticktock—
    a string quartet waltz
    a dying walker's walk
    a stewing pot
- Mike Garofalo, #193

 

 

Riddles

727 Riddles, Jokes, Brain Teasers

Compiled by Mike Garofalo

 


River of Stars: Selected Poems of Yosano Akiko. By Yosan Akiko (1873-1942). Translations and editing by Sam Hamill. 1997, 160 pages. 91 Tanka and numerous longer poems.


Saigyo Hohsi (1118-1190) was a Japanese monk who wrote many tanka. For exmaple, Gazing at the Moon.

 


Seltzer, Jacob D. Haiku and Tanka author from Vancouver, WA. Author of numerous books. A Pacific Northwest poet, artist, and editor.
"I have been writing haiku, tanka, and haibun in English since 2006. I was a past managing editor of Frogpond: The Journal of the Haiku Society of America (2023-2024). I am also the founding editor of Mayfly Editing and the Haiku Poet Interviews blog, and serve as a co-commentator for the Haiku Commentary blog with Nicholas Klacsanzky and Hifsa Ashraf. I am also an artist. My drawings and paintings can be viewed in my online art gallery."

 


Sicilian Quintain: "The Sicilian quintain employs an ABABA rhyme sequence. Though the original form of the Sicilian quintain had no specific form or meter, it is now common for it to be written iambic pentameter."

Sicilian Quintain

 

- Shakespeare, Sonnet 99

 

"The years have worn my body down;
and soon, I'll breathe my final breath.
Life has left me tired and rundown;
but I am not afraid of Death;
though I'll meet His gaze with a frown."
- Emile Pinet

 

"Home is so sad. It stays as it was left,
Shaped to the comfort of the last to go
As if to win them back. Instead, bereft
Of anyone to please, it withers so,
Having no heart to put aside the theft

And turn again to what it started as,
A joyous shot at how things ought to be,
Long fallen wide. You can see how it was:
Look at the pictures and the cutlery.
The music in the piano stool. That vase."
- Philip Larkin, Home is So Sad

 

"And on and on it goes, on through endless time
Never letting go of the person we love.
Two souls always searching for a path sublime
Connected yet apart, always cognizant of
That to others we will always be, a paradigm."
- Ryter Roethicle

 

 

 

Sonnets: Quintain Style

SM8 quintain + couplet + quintain + couplet
14 lines, stanzas with rhyme schemes or free verse

SM9 quintain + quintain + quintain
15 lines, stanzas with rhyme schemes or free verse

Explanation of SM8 and SM9 by Mike Garofalo

Sonnet Form Studies by Mike Garofalo

The Gushen Grove Sonnets

 

 

Space Chanteys: An Astronautical Antiphonary of Heuristic Quintains for Travelers in Space. By S. L. Vk.


Spanish Quintain: "The Spanish quintain (also known as the quintilla) is a type of five-line poetry that is eight syllables in length, each line written in iambic tetrameter. It usually follows a rhyme scheme of ABBAA or AABBA, but this five-line poetry form can follow any rhyme scheme (including ABAAB), as long as no more than two consecutive lines rhyme at a time."


"A flickering flame, on the wall
The sound of a, coyotes call
The desert winds, singing at night
Sandstorms dancing, in the moonlight
Embracing lovers, to befall"
- Pat Bibbs


"Madrid, castillo famoso
que al rey moro alivia el miedo,
arde en fiestas en su coso,
por ser el natal dichoso
de Alimenó de Toledo."
- Nicolás Fernández de Moratín,
Fiesta de toros en Madrid

 

 

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

Poems 1-99
Poems 100-199
Poems 200-299
Poems 300-399
Poems 400-499
Poems 500-599
Poems 600-699
Poems 700-799
Poems 800-899
Poems 900-1,000
Research



Stacking Stones: An Anthology of Short Tanka Sequences. Edited by M. Kei. 2018, 204 pages.


Sunflower Tanka: An Anthology of Tanka, Tanka Prose, and Experimental Tanka. Colleen M. Chesebro and Robbie Cheadle Editor. 2024, 126 pages.

 


Take Five: Best Contemporary Tanka, Volume 4. Editor-In-Chief : M. Kei. 2012, 264 pages. "Six editors/judges from around the world read 18,000 Tankas and selected 400 of the best. Includes a very good informative introduction by M. Kei. Indexes of poets and poems. Nice clean, uncluttered paperback. The main editor, M. Kei, said this will be the last Take Five Anthology because he is suffering from poor health. All Tanka are mimimalist: lowercase, no punctuation, free verse, 5 lines, in English. Very good information on other sources for Tanka poetry. Some Tanka sequences are included. Overall, a fine collection for a reasonable price."
From my Amazon review. VSCPL.

 


Tanka: "The tanka is a Japanese form of quintain poetry. Much like a haiku, the tanka has particular syllable requirements. In Japanese, the tanka is written as one unbroken line consisting of 31 syllables, but when it is converted into English poetry, it is usually broken up into five lines. In this case, the first and third lines contain five syllables, while the second, fourth, and fifth lines contain seven syllables." The Master Class definition of the Japanese form. Contemporary English Tanka is different.

 


The Tanka Anthology. Edited by Michael McClintock, Pamela Miller Ness, and Jim Kacian. 2023, 231 pages. Here is my Amazon review: "800 of the best tanka in English by 69 of its finest practitioners. This is an outstanding collection of Tanka poems in the English language. Easy to hold in one's hands, light, compact, good quality print and paper. Very good choices by the highly qualified editors. Most Tanka are in the minimalist style: lowercase, no punctuation, 5 lines. For a paperback, a bit expensive at $34, but worth the higher price. Includes biographies of the authors. An informative introduction by Michael McClintock in the hardback book version, not in the paperback. Good enough for many rereads!"

 

 

Tanka Poems by Mike Garofalo. Over 1,000 quintain poems.


Tanka Poetry: A Home for Traditional Tanka


Tanka Poetry Books at Amazon


Tanka Poetry Books at Barnes and Noble


Tanka Poetry Org.


Tanka Poetry - Wikipedia


The Tanka Society of America


Tankas: 530+ Examples

 


Texts Press Publications

Free Online Poetry and Studies
Vancouver, Washington
Texts Press Email

 


This Short Life: Minimalist Haiku. By Sanford Goldstein (1925-2023). 164 pages, 2014.

 

This Tanka Journey: A Tanka Poetry Chapbook: Collection of Experimental American-Japanese Poetry. By Susanna K. Hutcheson.

 

Three Part Harmony: Tanka Verses. By Debbie Strange.

 


25 Steps and Beyond: Collected Works. By Mike Garofalo. Includes haiku, tanka, quintains, rhymed verse, short and long poems. Ad-Free webpages. Google Translate drop down menu on each webpage.
Featuring: Docu-Poem: Highway 101 and 1. At the Edges of the West.


20th March: A Compilation of 27 Quintain Poems. By Ode Clement Igoni.

 

Typographical Quintain: Using unusual spacing, typographical arrangement, indentation, punctuation, capitalization, or broken words in a Quintain stanza. Mostly 5 lines; but, occasionally, 4 to 8 lines. Example:

e.
    e.
        cummings
Typ0
GraPH Ical
            Obsc
        UR
    Ities

- Mike Garofalo, #189

 

Emily D. loved the em dash—
—not a macron or en dash—
to signal shifts of her mind—
—to highlight a verse's charm—
to strengthen or stop a line—

"First—Chill—then Stupor—
—then things letting go—" ED

- Mike Garofalo, #187

 

the hostess with the mostess
hosted another party fine
poured the wine
told jokes
dined
- Mike Garofalo, #459

 

 

Under the Basho


 

"The uta in Arthur Waley's translations from the Japanese are poems of five lines (also known as tanka, meaning short poem, or waka) in which the first and third lines contain five sound units or on (loosely translated as 'syllables') and the rest seven. Almost all classsical Japanese poetry is written in this form, which contrasts with the range and technical freedom of Chinese poetry."
- John Carey, A Little History of Poetry, p. 225



Waka
, By Judi Van Gorder.

"If only I had
Merely watched as they fell ---
The plum blossoms---
But, alas, their fragrance
Lingers still on my sleeve."
- Sosei (859-897)

 


The Way of Tanka. By Naomi Beth Wakan. Shantee Arts LLC, 2017,
146 pages. $15.00. VSCPL. Here is my Amazon review: "Tanka are brief 5 line poems, typically using 19-33 sound units, uncapitalized, with little punctuation. This is a good brief introduction and guide to the reading and writing of Tanka style poetry. Many fine Tanka are included and briefly analyzed. She provides a few insights into the proper construction of the Pivot Point, Turning Point, the Volta, the Twist, usually in the 3rd line. (I have added more comments on the Pivot Line above.) She emphasizes the importance of a dramatic and surprising phrase in the last 5th line. She makes clear that writing English language haiku cannot follow some Japanese Tanka standards or sensitivities because these two languages have many differences in the sound elements, homonyms, more rhyming in Hiragana, culture, and poetic heritage. The Tanka form has been used since 800 CE in Japan. She includes a few of her longer Tanka sequences. She discusses tanka collage, tanka montage, Haibun, McClintock's Taika, Kyoka tanka wit and humor, minimalist tanka, response/dialogue tankas, Ekphrastic tanka, love tankas, travel/place tanka, diary tanka, tanka strings, nostalgic tanka, tan renga, confessional tanka, and tanka sequences. Japanese terms like wabi, sari, aware - mono no aware, kyojo, makoto, shibusa, and kokora are briefly explained. Ms. Wakan provides a brief bibliography and lists of online resources. She talks about the authors that influenced her. A fine companion to The Tanka Anthology (Edited by McClintlock, Ness, and Kacian, 2023) or Four Decades on My Tanka Road: The Tanka Collections of Sanford Goldstein, 2012."

 

Michael Dylan Welch. Brief Biography. Graceguts Website.


What is a Tanka Poem?


Wind Five Folded: An Anthology of English-Language Tanka. By Jane Reichhold and Werner Reichhold. Gualala, CA: AHA Books, 1994.

 

Winner of the Quintain: A Writers's Notebook.

 

Writing Haiku: A Beginner's Guide to Composing Japanese Poetry: Includes Tanka, Renga, Haiga, Senryu and Haibun. Tuttle, 192 pages, 2022.


Writing Tanka Poems


Zen Poetry Anthology, Research, Bibliography, Notes. By Mike Garofalo.

 

 

 

As for my personal
Quintains Style
of writing,
here are my tendencies:

I frequently and freely use:
Rhymes, alliteration, assonance,
allusions, metaphors, symbols,
and other poetic devices.
Punctuation: — ; . ! : () [] & * " '
Indentation and spaces for
typographical variety.

All of my poetry webpages after
2023 are CSS formatted, and are easily
viewed on a typical cellphone.

In order to fit a line length inside a cellphone screen, for enhanced readibility, I frequently use an iambic pentameter (5 stress, roughly decasyllabic line or even down to a one-word iambic line (1 stress.) Limitation of line length in a Quintain for cellphone readibility presents a unique compositional challenge. Also, most contemporary minimalist Tanka have very short line lengths.

All my poetry webpages have a drop down
Google Translate menu included.

With Tanka style Quintains, I try to use Pivot Points (lines 3 & 5) effectively for for impact, kicks, abruptness, contrasts, changes, etc.

My lines are often longer/fatter prose than other contemporry Tanka.
A few of my poems are in the minimalist Tanka style.

I find that using a photograph with a poem is an effective
means to stimulate my thinking.
I mostly write first in a notebook with a pencil.

I try to learn by reading the best Quintain writers.
Clearly, I imitate some of the best already in print.

I connect to my various related webpages with Links.

I began studying and writing Quintains in 2021. I have read lots of Quintain and Tanka poetry. I am learning from those who have written noted Quintain and Tanka poems, and who have written usefully about this form of poetry. I plan to study, work, and make some progress in understanding Quintains, Pentastichs, and Tankas. I must be patient with myself, be steadfast, endure:

"Talent is insignificant. I know a lot of talented ruins. Beyond talent lie all the usual words: discipline, love, luck, but, most of all, endurance."
- James Baldwin

I intend to enjoy the creative playing with words and ideas.

I have considerable experience with both writing, reading, and studying Haiku since 1998. I read all of R.H.Blyth's essays and haiku books in the 1960's. Zen poetry has always appealed to me.

 

 

 

Tanka Poetry Research
English Language Quintain Poems

By Mike Garofalo

Research, Studies, Notes
Bibliography, Links, Docs

 

Tanka - Wikipedia

19 to 33 sounds/syllables/On
5 lines for traditional Japanese Tanka: 7-5-7-7-7
Modern Japanese Tanka poems:
5 lines, 31 sounds.

Naomi Wakan defines the Tanka line
length pattern as:
Long, short, Long, Long, Long

I have read Tanka in a:
Short, Long, Short, Long, Long;
and other variations.
Minimalist haiku might go down to 19 sounds.

Of course, if clear intent and meaning can be
conveyed with fewer words - Bravo!

The 7-5-7 pattern is the norm for Japanese Haiku.
I have also seen 5-7-5 patterns for haiku,
and many other variations.
Haiku are normally just 3 lines.

Most Tanka poems I have read are left untitled.
Occasionally, longer sequences of Tanka on a
particular theme might be titled.

I have a propensity for using rhymes,
capitalization, and punctuation. Therefore,
I am a bit outside the norm for Tanka.
Readers are forewarned!

Normally, I read Tanka in English
that are unrhymed quintains, free verse,
no capitalization except for proper nouns, little
punctuation, and 19 sounds or less; sometimes
called "minimalist Tanka."

Syllable counting in the Japanese language for Tanka or Haiku is somewhat easier than in the English language. I believe, for another case, that the Italian language sounds favored the birth of rhymed sonnets.

 

 

 

Pivot Line, Volta, Twist, Turn, Shifting the Focus
In a Tanka Poem

“The pivot line means one thing as a finish to the first couple of lines and something else as a herald to the last two lines.” - Naomi Wakan, p. 36

The third line in a five-line Tanka poem.
Voltas or pivot lines are also used in Sonnets to shift the focus.


The Pivot Line might Shift or Pivot the Focus:

Pivot from the general to the more specific, or vice versa
Switch from the impersonal to the personal, or vice versa
Change from one time to another, e.g., past to future,
     past to present, etc.
Pivot from abstract to concrete, or vice versa
Shift from a limited to a more extended view of a thought

Change from a word choice to a pun or homonym for contrast
Move from one thought to a contrasting or contradictory thought
Vault from one emotion to a related emotion
Pivot from one idea to an associated or related idea
Contrast a physical thing image to a related concept or idea

Switch from a clear image or idea to unrelated arbitrary ideas
Pivot from nonsense into more nonsense
Shift from obscurity to clarity, or vice versa
Change from free verse to rhymed verse, or vice versa
Move from many nouns to some verbs, or vice versa

Shift from the historical to the ahistorical, or vice versa
Detour from the everyday to the universal, or vice versa
Pivot from the spare direct immediate Haiku
     mind to Tanka complexities
Change from one religious perspective to another
Move from technological to pastoral, pagan, earthy

Change from no punctuation to using punctuation
Shift from secular to Buddhist or Taoist thinking
Detour from the non-human to human emotions and feelings
Pivot from satisfied to dissatisfied or unhappy, or vice versa
Switch from one simile or metaphor to a related one

From facts to feelings and emotions, or vice versa
From emotions related to love or those of hate, or vice versa
From life to death, elegies, or vice versa
From the workday ordinary to celebrations, or vice versa
From Death day and ending poems to birth and beginnings

From a woman's interaction with a man, or vice versa
From minority views to majority views, or vice versa


"Tanka are not just stretched haiku." - Michael Dylan Welch

"Tanka are the perfect vehicle for capturing the swift, direct, pulse of emotion." - Carl Sesar

"No art form is more stubbornly national than poetry." - T. S. Eliot

 

 


25 Steps and Beyond: Collected Works


Cuttings: Haiku by Mike Garofalo


Buddhism and Literature


Uncle Mike's Cellphone Poetry Series

 

 

 

Mike Garofalo's Internet Web Publishing
Objectives, Aims, and Policies:


Provide open access to people worldwide.
People can read my poetry for free: 24/7.
Google translate drop-down menu included.

 

No advertising or pop-up ads on my webpages.
No cookies log-in steps. No irrelevant graphics.
No AI generated ads!
No requests for your email before reading.
Not promoting chapbooks or
books of mine or from others to sell.

 

Since 2024, my webpages are in
CSS format and cellphone readable.

I use my Cloud Hands Blog for
poetry posts, posts on a variety
of topics, promoting others,
and selling books.

 

I research and study poetry at my home.

In 2025, I am carefully studying writers
from the San Francisco Renaissance Period
(1940-1999), and the poetry of John Ashbery.

 

My academic backgound includes:
philosophy, information science,
librarianship, education, and business.

Feedback or suggestions are welcome.

 

Editors and publishers who think my
poetry has commercial possibilities are
encouraged to contact me.

 

I've been employed as a webmaster,
grant writer, and web publisher
since 1998.

 

25 Steps and Beyond:
The Collected Works of Mike Garofalo


Texts Press Publications
Free Online Poetry and Studies
By Mike Garofalo
Vancouver, Washington
Text Press Email


 

 

 

 

 

Michael Peter Garofalo (1946-) grew up in East Los Angeles, was educated in Catholic Schools, lived with two other brothers, graduated (B.A., M.S.) from local universities, married Blanche Karen Eubanks, served in the US Air Force, worked in and managed many City and Los Angeles County Public Libraries, raised two children, socialized, traveled, and learned. Retired as the Regional Administrator, East Region, Los Angeles County Public Library in 1998. We moved to a rural 5 acre property in Red Bluff, in the North Sacramento Valley, CA. Webmaster since 1999. Worked part-time for the Corning School District (Technology and Media Services Manager and District Librarian); and as a yoga, Taijiquan, and fitness club instructor until 2016. Traveled extensively in Northern California, Oregon, and Washington. We both retired, and we moved to Vancouver, WA, in 2017. Currently in 2025: reading, writing, gardening, harmonica playing, home chores, yurt camping, exercise, traveling in the Northwest, web publishing, family events, poetry research, photography, Northwest research, Nature mysticism, Buddhist and Taoist literature, walking, sports events, etc.

 

Collected Works of MPG

 

Text Art and Concrete Poetry

25 Steps and Beyond; Collected Works


Texts Press Publications

Free Online Poetry and Studies
Vancouver, Washington
Texts Press Email

 

Quintain Poetry Sections on this Webpage
Bundled Up, Volume 1

Poems 1-99
Poems 100-199
Poems 200-299
Poems 300-399
Poems 400-499
Poems 500-599
Poems 600-699
Poems 700-799
Poems 800-899
Poems 900-1,000
Quintains Research

Bundled Up: Volume 2
Quintains 1,000 - 1,500

 

I really appreciate positive feedback,
reviews, kudos, and encouragement
about the value of my free webpages.
Send your comments to:
Text Press Email

Mirrors: Pentastichs, Tankas,

 

This document was last edited, revised,
reformatted, added to, relinked,
changed, improved, or modified
by Mike Garofalo
on September 4, 2025.