Sending on ahead My contemplated image of the form Of remembered cherry flowers, How many ranges have I vainly crossed Taking for blossoms white clouds upon the peaks? ~Shunzei, Chūshū Eisô*
*Edited by: Miner, Introduction to Japanese Court Poetry, 110
A freshly-opened cherry bud … her lips upon the flute. She leans in the corner of the balcony: the night is chill, her silken robes are thin, her fingers cold . . . but music floats through the frosty woods and startled plums fall pattering down. ~Chang Hsien (Ed. various. The Jade Flute, The Project Gutenberg eBook)
The general sense impressions I have of “alone times” are moments of grief and loss as well as feelings similar to forlorn, isolated, lonely.
if there’s a house standing alone, sure enough… plum blossoms ~Issa (www.haikuguy.com)
I have often pondered a different sense of “alone” after learning of it’s origins; Middle English, “all one.”
“All one” speaks to me of a time of solitary; a sense of completion, wholeness, self-direction, and freedom.
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