Hi all
I would love to read some haiku about the season in your area! For large parts of the northern and southern hemisphere we are moving into spring or fall, but I know that other parts of the world have different seasonal patterns.
A few to get you started from classical writers (English translations by Robert Hass from The Essential Haiku):
Midfield
attached to nothing,
the skylark singing
-- Matsuo Basho
The cherry blossoms fallen
through the branches
a temple
-- Yosa Buson
Spring rain:
a mouse is lapping
the Sumida River
- Kobayashi Issa
Some contemporary poets (from last spring's edition of hedgerow journal #127):
sunburst
more flower
than pot
-- Elizabeth Alford
making the meadow
last longer
-- crickets
-- Gary Hotham
day moon
a sick friend
brings me flowers
-- Eishuu (former member of Treeleaf)
first news
of a friend's death
blackthorn blossom
-- Kokuu
So, go feel, taste and touch nature and get haikuing!!!
Gassho
Kokuu
-sattoday-
I would love to read some haiku about the season in your area! For large parts of the northern and southern hemisphere we are moving into spring or fall, but I know that other parts of the world have different seasonal patterns.
A few to get you started from classical writers (English translations by Robert Hass from The Essential Haiku):
Midfield
attached to nothing,
the skylark singing
-- Matsuo Basho
The cherry blossoms fallen
through the branches
a temple
-- Yosa Buson
Spring rain:
a mouse is lapping
the Sumida River
- Kobayashi Issa
Some contemporary poets (from last spring's edition of hedgerow journal #127):
sunburst
more flower
than pot
-- Elizabeth Alford
making the meadow
last longer
-- crickets
-- Gary Hotham
day moon
a sick friend
brings me flowers
-- Eishuu (former member of Treeleaf)
first news
of a friend's death
blackthorn blossom
-- Kokuu
So, go feel, taste and touch nature and get haikuing!!!
Gassho
Kokuu
-sattoday-
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