Early twilight - a thick fog rolls in over the harbour.
Link with 930: Sea.
[My Father who worked in Zoology at the University of Alberta took field trips to Washington (Friday Harbour) and British Colombia (Bamfield) every Spring for many years. He told me of often seeing fog roll in from the horizon as a thick brown presence. With night falling it heightens the feeling of impending darkness.]
Pamela: I'm not familiar with that. I was able to find websites on "The Never Ending Story" but I couldn't find a reference to "The Nothing". Perhaps you can tell us what it/he is.
Aurora: Thanks.
Pat: Amazing the different emotions a poem can evoke.
From "The Haiku Anthology" I became interested in Haiku and I have since written numerous haiku, senyru, and tanka. "Masago", my haiku pen-name, means "grain(s) of sand" in Japanese. I have recently started learning Esperanto and Japanese. A few years ago I developed a new eastern verse form which we now call 'Renhai'.
9 comments:
Early twilight -
a thick fog rolls in
over the harbour.
Link with 930: Sea.
[My Father who worked in Zoology at the University of Alberta took field trips to Washington (Friday Harbour) and British Colombia (Bamfield) every Spring for many years. He told me of often seeing fog roll in from the horizon as a thick brown presence. With night falling it heightens the feeling of impending darkness.]
like THE NOTHING in The Never Ending Story
I would love to see this.
Nicely captured, Vaughn.
An eerie feel rolls in too. Gave me chills.
nice one
again you have captured a scene perfectly
i can feel it coming... brrr!
Pamela: I'm not familiar with that. I was able to find websites on "The Never Ending Story" but I couldn't find a reference to "The Nothing". Perhaps you can tell us what it/he is.
Aurora: Thanks.
Pat: Amazing the different emotions a poem can evoke.
Floots: Thanks.
Polona: :-) I different chill than Pat's?
For me this brings some warm memories! :-)
Tikkis: I am pleased that they do.
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