ARTS: Your Haiku!
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I am not the expert by any means. But rain always fall, winds always blow and there always is spring in the north.
rain
winds
northern spring
I generally write and then strip out anything unnecessary but it is a matter of opinion what is necessary and what is unnecessary.Comment
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I like:
Thunder
Or
Sunrise
It is great to consider the impact and meaning of a single word but it isn't really a haiku. 'tundra' on a blank page works because of the interplay between the word and the space. Thunder and sunrise do not do that.
I would put into the category of fun to play with as are single colour canvasses, but paling with repetition.Last edited by Kokuu; 04-05-2019, 10:18 AM.Comment
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plum blossoms in spring
dancing leafs drop in autumn wind
the geese move to the south
Firstly, you don't need spring in addition to plum blossom as that already sets the season as spring.
Also, a haiku is generally set in one moment in time and place, so usually one season. There are exceptions though.
Putting this in autumn it would be best just with the last part:
leaves dance
on the wind
departing geeseComment
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This might be a little wordy, Hishiryo.
Firstly, you don't need spring in addition to plum blossom as that already sets the season as spring.
Also, a haiku is generally set in one moment in time and place, so usually one season. There are exceptions though.
Putting this in autumn it would be best just with the last part:
leaves dance
on the wind
departing geese
Gassho,
Ben
StComment
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The problem here is that there is no dynamic tension as there is between two parts of a good haiku.
It is great to consider the impact and meaning of a single word but it isn't really a haiku. 'tundra' on a blank page works because of the interplay between the word and the space. Thunder and sunrise do not do that.
I would put into the category of fun to play with as are single colour canvasses, but paling with repetition.
thunder
This is a great haiku and this is why:
the before and after silence of thunder is not the same.
sleeping silence
thunder
startled awake silence
The silences are very different and provide the tension for a good haiku. "thunder" is the punch line and the second silence with the "aha" moment. Unenlightened vs enlightened silence. There is also mention of season.
Same goes for the next haiku:
Sunrise
There is dark and bright light before and after sunrise. The punchline is "Sunrise" and the "aha" moment is the light that comes afterwards. Another great haiku. There is also mention of time/season.
Creativity is fun and a haiku is a haiku when someone calls it a haiku.
My 2 cents.
Gassho, Jishin, STComment
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空道 心志 Kudo Shinshi
For Zen students a weed is a treasure. With this attitude, whatever you do, life becomes an art.
— Shunryu Suzuki
E84I - JAJComment
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Moonlight cuts rivers
Out of dark slopes on the ground
Bright and stark like ice
red-dressed sun flows
into star-sprinkled night
I sleep
Sometimes not knowing is the best! Very good effort!
plodding thoughts
shadow and incense smoke
the watcher watches
Is good, Mitka! I wonder if 'rising thoughts' might be even stronger to convey the relationship between the thoughts and incense?Comment
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The silences are very different and provide the tension for a good haiku. "thunder" is the punch line and the second silence with the "aha" moment. Unenlightened vs enlightened silence. There is also mention of season.
thunder
the silence before
and after
If haiku were just one word I doubt they would have survived for so long and spread to so many different countries and cultures. We need something more to say what it was about *that* thunder and your reaction to it that makes it different from any other moment of thunder. What was it about *that* particular sunrise.
The interest is in the specificity rather than generality.
Gassho
KokuuComment
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