Good Things!......From ‘Emergence’ Magazine…..
by Bernie Bell - 08:44 on 17 November 2025
Good Things!......
A bit of a tale….I saw this on the Ancient Stone Bothering page….
https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1275573344567700&set=pcb.2904644176397363
…and observed that no comment is needed from me – but I will mention here…Trump’s America…The Elite in Britain today both Political and Royal with the King of England wining & dining Trump because he’s told to ….. local Government etc etc etc.
I then went to Fergusartscotland’s FB page to see what else he makes, and…..
https://www.facebook.com/p/Fergusartscotland-100063451405806/
My comment there was…
“I just want to say....you make good, interesting things which show a strong appreciation of.....what's around us and in us. I'm spending far too much time scrolling here, so I’ll stop now, and post a link to your page on my page.
It heartens me to know that folk like you exist. Seriously. I’m not being a Facebook creep……
http://www.spanglefish.com/berniesblog/blog.asp?blogid=16820 “
Seriously good stuff.
I looked up the Meigle Stones…..
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meigle_Sculptured_Stone_Museum
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From ‘Emergence’ Magazine….
Haiku by Ron C. Moss
A requiem for the seasons is an act of living remembrance for what is vanishing, be that long-cherished seasonal moments, forms of celebration that once tied us to their cycles, or species that are going extinct. Opening the theme of “requiem,” in our exploration of the seasons, this collection of haiku is the first in a trilogy by Australian artist and poet Ron C. Moss. Immersing us in brief flashes in time, the four-hundred-year-old poetic form of haiku braids our emotional and spiritual selves with seasonal expressions of place so that we may find ourselves reflected in their impermanence. Here, traditional kigo (seasonal words) yield to markers of our darkening ecological reality: “firestorm,” “rising floodwater,” “ghost rainbow,” each evoking absence, fragility, and loss. Across ten haiku, Ron orients us towards an elegy for the familiar form of the seasons.”
https://emergencemagazine.org/poem/requiem/
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