Cloud Pavilion

by John Brandi

Cloud Pavilion
A Kyoto Suite

Silence
the heart of the mountain
after the clouds leave

Bowing, lifting
to the temple gong
a young bamboo

Sudden downpour
a sandal floats
from the graveyard

Crying tonight
as it did for Saigyo
a deer under Mt. Ogura

Bullet train
speeding through
these flowers of spring

April mist
moon before mountain
mountain before moon

Sakura viewing
a sea of beads cocked
to cell phones

On the Philosopher’s
Walk, answering
my own talk

Brushing aside
wild azalea . . .
rainfilled deer prints

The guide’s speech
inaudible
croaking frogs

Pink magnolia:
in so many different languages
a pink magnolia

Mating cranes
in lacquered reeds
bedroom of the princess

Hall of Council
worn tatami where
the master sat

Tour over
the moss garden
begins to breathe again

Wrapped in fog
wandering mountains
sleep

Cloud Pavilion
withered grass
my hillside cushion

No wine
I let the moon
fill my glass

Fallen leaves
the abbot sweeps
around them

Study peace
watch the morning
glory fade

The Immortals too
grown old
on our wars.

Note: These poems were penned in Kyoto, Nara, and Eihei-ji, Japan.
I bring them into the world in memory of Japan’s great woman poet,
Chiyo-ni, who fully embraced Peace through the Way of Haiku.