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 Haiku (Never Published) by Allen Ginsberg 
						Drinking my teaWithout sugar-
 No difference.
 
 The sparrow shits
 upside down
 --ah! my brain & eggs
 
 Mayan head in a
 Pacific driftwood bole
 --Someday I'll live in N.Y.
 
 Looking over my shoulder
 my behind was covered
 with cherry blossoms.
 
 Winter Haiku
 I didn't know the names
 of the flowers--now
 my garden is gone.
 
 I slapped the mosquito
 and missed.
 What made me do that?
 
 Reading haiku
 I am unhappy,
 longing for the Nameless.
 
 A frog floating
 in the drugstore jar:
 summer rain on grey pavements.
 (after Shiki)
 
 On the porch
 in my shorts;
 auto lights in the rain.
 
 Another year
 has past-the world
 is no different.
 
 The first thing I looked for
 in my old garden was
 The Cherry Tree.
 
 My old desk:
 the first thing I looked for
 in my house.
 
 My early journal:
 the first thing I found
 in my old desk.
 
 My mother's ghost:
 the first thing I found
 in the living room.
 
 I quit shaving
 but the eyes that glanced at me
 remained in the mirror.
 
 The madman
 emerges from the movies:
 the street at lunchtime.
 
 Cities of boys
 are in their graves,
 and in this town...
 
 Lying on my side
 in the void:
 the breath in my nose.
 
 On the fifteenth floor
 the dog chews a bone-
 Screech of taxicabs.
 
 A hardon in New York,
 a boy
 in San Fransisco.
 
 The moon over the roof,
 worms in the garden.
 I rent this house.
 
 
 [Haiku composed in the backyard cottage at 1624
 Milvia Street, Berkeley 1955, while reading R.H.
 Blyth's 4 volumes, "Haiku."]
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