Modern American sentence form: each sentence is a Haiku consisting of 17 syllables in total.

  • You and I are hidden except for this mighty sky upon this blue earth.
  • Moments wandering through narrow bays, the eagle traveled moons ago.
  • Frosted sky, hoarfrost leaves, heavenly blue waters, upside-down, morn tender still.
  • Sun rays fill the bareness, sparkling skies, highway sounds bounce far away.
  • Sycamore trees, framed in blue, winter waters hold rain, land, and me.
  • A gold-stone day in a marbled sky; clouds cut — diced, and sliced.
  • It’s a winter snow pearl day, only a moonstone sky, nothing as rich.
  • Making me smile as I just cooked a pot of Momma’s black-eye peas.
  • Snow etched ridges hiding among pine rows, chasing open sky.