This is no April Fool’s joke. National Poetry Month has officially begun!

I have decided to follow the daily prompts from the NaPoWriMo website. Today’s challenge is to write a Lune or American Haiku. A Lune can be written in two ways. The first, similar to a Haiku, has 3-5-3 syllables. I have decided to experiment with the second type created by poet Jack Collom, which limits the number of words to 3-5-3.

My Lune is inspired by Northern Alabama, where I grew up sweltering in the unbearable summer heat.


 

Day 1 – Lune

Flat, verdant fields

Open a like lover’s arms

Drawing me in.

A dogwood tree,

Petals of pink and white,

Sings her tale.

Bob, Bob White

Calls the quail on high

Perching and searching.

Drops of perspiration

Cling to my pale skin

And summer begins.