geese signing dusk: modern haiku

4 Comments

Poem Commentary

This is my example of a modern haiku- one that captures the haiku moment and spirit of zazen while reducing the reliance upon the "on" or syllables, most commonly expressed in 5-7-5 syllables over three lines.

geese signing dusk: modern haiku

geese-

signing

dusk

Poem Comments

(4)

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dancinghawk commented on geese signing dusk: modern haiku

02-14-2011

my favorite dusk signature is the heron's ... but the geese call out the magic of the moment nicely, too :) nice experiment ... great "picture" :) -dh

aw3haiku

02/14/2011

thanks, dancinghawk. never have seen herons in flight. what are they like?

Stardrift commented on geese signing dusk: modern haiku

02-14-2011

Aw3haiku, this one is an automatic classic! It also has that particular quality of making one wonder how this image has gone unsaid in this way until now. And only four syllables, lol! Also, RHPeat is of course right - though only for traditional. This one is more toward contemporary as well as experimental. So, I'm giving it a 9 for awesomeness, and an added point for extra-awesomeness - 10. Spirit light.

aw3haiku

02/14/2011

you make it shine Stardrift thanks

RHPeat commented on geese signing dusk: modern haiku

02-14-2011

Nice picture, I'm there. The snapshot is real, What's missing is nature's antithesis: the "kireji". Lovely nonetheless. A poet friend// RH Peat

aw3haiku

02/14/2011

Thank you, RH. I use the onomatopoeia of dusk as kireji. The transliteration of Japanese to English loses almost entirely this element. I have tried to incorporate punctuation and onomatopoeia as kireji to provide that sensation.

angelchaser commented on geese signing dusk: modern haiku

02-14-2011

I love haikus and have been criticized for running them together to form a poem where each haiku cannot stand on its own. Most people are familiar with the 5-7-5 syllyble structure, but most don't know that different countries have different rules for haiku. Some places consider a haiku to be any very short poem, so this fits perfectly. A haiku can be only one line, it can have a different structure, not limited by syllybles. Oh well, I've ranted long enough, feel free to read some of my haikus and let me know what you think. Also, if you haven't read her, I'mStillHere is wonderful at haiku. I introduced her to them and as far as I'm concerned, her haikus outshine mine any day of the year.

aw3haiku

02/14/2011

angel, there is nothing wrong with running haiku all together to form a string or longer poem or poetic image. Traditionally this was done between two poets in a poetic dialogue 5-7-5 7-7 5-7-5 7-7 "haikai no renga." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haikai_no_renga Your approach is a modern one, and a Western one. I use it too sometimes. Though try to work on each haiku as an individual image, as haiku first with its attendant elements. Then when read in a string, they are the very stones of Fuji.

When power leads man towards arrogance, poetry reminds him of his limitations. When power narrows the area of man's concern, poetry reminds him of the richness and diversity of existence. When power corrupts, poetry cleanses.

John F. Kennedy (1917-1963) Thirty-fifth President of the USA

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