Episode 29

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Published on:

16th Jun 2026

29. Henri Cole — “Haiku”

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Henri Cole wrote his poem, "Haiku," after visiting a jellyfish exhibit at an aquarium. In the poem, he places himself on the beach, in red pajamas, observing and contemplating what he calls the “unnatural cycles” that have emerged in our world.

He jumps between the global and the self, switching between third person and first person, connecting our individual lives to the uncanny and unsettling natural world that we find ourselves in, in a way that poetry seems best positioned to explore.

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I’m John Fiege, and this episode of Chrysalis is part of the Chrysalis Poets series.

Henri was born in Japan to a French mother and an American father. He is the author of a memoir and twelve books of poetry. His awards are numerous and include the Jackson Prize, the Kingsley Tufts Award, the Rome Prize, the Berlin Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Lenore Marshall Award, a fellowship from the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard, and the Award of Merit Medal in Poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He has taught at many colleges and universities, including Smith, Reed, Brandeis, Columbia, Harvard, and Yale. He currently teaches at Claremont McKenna College.

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I spoke to Henri on June 29, 2022, and we had a horrible international internet connection with a delay. We’ve edited the conversation so it sounds more natural, but please forgive any remaining moments of awkward pauses and jumps.

Here is Henri Cole reading his poem, “Haiku.”

“Haiku” by Henri Cole

After the sewage flowed into the sea

and took the oxygen away, the fishes fled,

but the jellies didn’t mind. They stayed

and ate up the food the fishes left behind.

I sat on the beach in my red pajamas

and listened to the sparkling foam,

like feelings being fustigated. Nearby,

a crayfish tugged on a string. In the distance,

a man waved. Unnatural cycles seemed to be

establishing themselves, without regard to our lives.

Deep inside, I could feel a needle skip:

Autumn dark.

Murmur of the saw.

Poor humans.

Henri Cole

Henri Cole. Photo by Claudia Gianvenuti for the Civitella Ranieri Foundation, 2009. Courtesy of Henri Cole.

Henri Cole is an American poet who has authored numerous collections and garnered a plethora of vestiges of acclaim for his far-reaching and deeply moving works. Such recognition includes the American Academy of Arts and Letter’s Rome Prize, the Berlin Prize, and, most recently, membership in the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

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Born in Fukuoka, Japan, Cole grew up in Virginia, eventually pursuing a Bachelor of Arts degree at the College of William and Mary. Through further educational pursuits, Cole also achieved a Master of Arts at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, as well as a Master of Fine Arts at Columbia University.

Cole is the author of numerous collections of poetry spanning five decades, including 2003’s Middle Earth, which won the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. He released Gravity and Center, a collection of sonnets across 29 years, this past May. In addition to these collections, he wrote a memoir in 2018 called Orphic Paris. Cole has also collaborated with visual artists Jenny Holzer and Kiki Smith, with an example of such work being the 2004 installation Purple Cross, which presents lines pulled from “Blur” (a poem from Middle Earth) using LEDs.

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In addition to his aforementioned awards, Cole has also received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, Ingram Merrill Foundation, and Carmargo Foundation. He has previously served as executive director of the Academy of American Poets for six years and editor for poetry of the New Republic for four years. Having taught at Ohio State, Harvard, and Yale, he now works at Claremont McKenna College as a Professor of Literature.

Notes and Media Recommendations

Credits

This episode was researched by Brodie Mutschler and edited by Sarah Westrich, with additional editing by Morgan Honaker. Music is by Daniel Rodríguez Vivas. Mixing is by Morgan Honaker.

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About the Podcast

Chrysalis with John Fiege
A newsletter and podcast about transformation in the face of global ecological crisis.
I’m a professor, filmmaker, and storyteller interested in the question of how we can transform ourselves—as individuals, as societies, as an entire species—in ways that allow our planet’s ecological systems to thrive.

I began this work through the study of environmental history and cultural geography. I then became a filmmaker and photographer focused on stories of transformation in the face of ecological peril.

Most recently, I launched the Chrysalis newsletter and podcast to have conversations with a wide variety of environmental thinkers, as well as to share my writing on our relationship with the natural world.

My newsletter, podcast, and photographs are available for free to anyone. By becoming a paid subscriber on johnfiege.earth—what we call a Butterfly Subscriber—you can also stream my films and post on the community comments section of the newsletter. Your support provides essential resources for the newsletter and podcast to grow and remain free and ad-free for everyone.

Humanity has been a very hungry caterpillar, eating everything in sight. Can we now transform into a beautiful butterfly ready to pollinate the flowers, rather than just eat the leaves?

This is the question that animates me—and I believe that digging deeply into the question itself can catalyze transformation.

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