The Gardener and the Rose Haiku
once upon a time
a gardener and a rose
cared for a seedling
in their yard. the gard-
ener carved demons out of
trees, dragons out of
hedges, witches out
of thorns. he and the rose taught
her how best to grow
in the shadows of
these monstrous forms, how best to
fight the cold and dark.
before long she grew
into a flowering sap-
ling, straight, bright and strong.
one day the rose fell
for a boxwood the garden-
er had shaped into
a green-velvet prince,
and the sapling began to
lose focus and stray.
when the busy buzz
of a black and yellow hon-
eybee came her way
one day, she let it
lay on her and harvest her,
intoxicating
her. it stole her gold,
her goodness and her will to
thrive, and so she died.
months went by and the
gardener found another
to love but the night
of their wedding crashed
his head recklessly into
a tree and died. the
rose and boxwood went
on tending seedlings until
one sad day the box-
wood died. the rose wept,
darkened, bereft, but stayed strong,
and staved off black death.
This is my third NAPO here, I think. I wanted to write verse that followed some rules but broke others; hence, a series of urban, autobiographical haiku. I chose this one to post because it's not like any of the rest of them. Thanks to everyone who took time out to read my thread, and apologies to everyone for not fluffing to my full capacity. My thread is
here.