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10-16-2008, 12:11 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Saint Paul, MN
Posts: 9,668
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Lee, thanks for all these generous insights. I'm going to try a revision of my lone effort to see if I'm any closer to getting it.
Icy walking bridge.
Below, the highway screams.
Even air is frozen.
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10-16-2008, 12:28 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Connecticut, USA
Posts: 7,587
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Greetings, Lee.
Below are the 9 haiku I posted in the open mike, plus one new one.
Crickets near corn field:
Is this grand recital for
The ears of the corn?
A praying mantis
Squashed dead against the doorjamb —
Preyed on by the door.
One tiny cricket
Stridulates in the bedroom.
My dog sleeps; I don’t.
A green grasshopper
Clings to the bedroom lampshade;
The window's open.
Dog days of summer;
Fruit flies fly around
In the refrigerator.
The dog is scratching;
A wee flea on his hind leg
Is getting seasick.
Sleep … Walk dog … Eat … Walk
dog … Sleep … Walk dog … Eat … Walk dog …
Sleepwalk … Eat dog … Oops!
What’s Fido feeling
Riding in the fast auto,
Autumn flying past?
In a shop window,
A dog sees his reflection—
Both of them growling.
Naked clothes hangers
Lined up like xylophone bars;
Sunbeams play their wood
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10-16-2008, 12:46 PM
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: England
Posts: 174
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Maryann,
If I may make a comment on your piece -
I like this one, as well as the original one. It evokes a certain feeling (and I mean that in a sensual way), but I find it static. Each line repeats a moment and the piece fails to progress in terms of space and time.
The juxtaposition or the caesura of haiku implies a leap, either in time or space or both.
But the static nature of your haiku may work for others. I s'pose my crit isn't so much a crit but an opinion.
Incidentally, has anyone come across Pierre Reverdy's notion of the poetic image? Whilst he never wrote haiku himself, the presence of a juxtaposing cut in the form of haiku reminds me of his idea that:
"[the poetic image] is not born from a comparison but from a juxtaposition of two more or less distant realities.
"The more distant and true the relationship between the two realities, the stronger the image will be - the more emotional power and poetic reality it will have."
I have this idea in mind whenever I'm writing haiku! It's almost as though Pierre were talking about haiku.....
Stuart
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10-16-2008, 01:15 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: usa
Posts: 7,687
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Another haiku lesson - do not get up at 5:45 am, see the full moon in the west, dash off a haiku, then think you can post it in a master class without revising it.
Today's turtle update - I saw the same turtle, in the same spot on the highway's center strip, now squashed. Poor turtle!
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10-16-2008, 01:34 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Missouri
Posts: 2,025
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Mary, I can never understand why turtles get hit. It just breaks my heart. It's not like they are darting out in front of the car. A slight swerve or tires on either side and the turtles fine. I think there are asses out there who purposely run them over. Okay done. Sorry Lee!
Donna
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10-16-2008, 02:11 PM
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Distinguished Guest
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Lincoln, Illinois, USA
Posts: 265
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Quote:
Originally posted by Stephen Collington:
Hi Stuart, Lee,
Stuart, seeing your name up above reminded me of something you said on our Warm-Up thread that I thought was interesting, and that I think might make a useful question for Lee to address with us:
Quote:
Originally posted by Stuart Farley:
Have you ever noticed that haiku sometimes reads like a little note or annotation? I mean that in the best possible way.
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Now, I know you say "in the best possible way," and I agree that that is sometimes the result. But as a personal observation, I often find that haiku suffer from being too much like annotations, or even definitions in a dictionary. So, to use a deliberately bad made-up example,
autumn evening
cool wind blows in from the west
as sun is setting
You don't say!
This is one of the traps that beginner haikuists often seem to fall into--and sometimes, not-so-beginners too. Lee's been giving us some very insightful advice on "sparking distances" today . . . this may come under the the general heading too, I suppose. Anyway, Lee, if you've got a moment, it seems an interesting question. Any thoughts?
Steve C.
p.s. (Editing back.) Look Lee, you've got a star now!
p.p.s. (Editing back again.) Just realized how funny my salutation at the top of the post must look! Now all we need is a Jackson.
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Steve, It sounds like what you are referring to is what we often call "nature notes." Though haiku often begin as journal entries, a journal entry generally do not make a haiku (sic). Something must be added if it isn't already there: significance. As you point out, without significance we have a "so what?" haiku.
p.p.s. Charge!
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10-16-2008, 03:23 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: oy of the storm
Posts: 5,002
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Shalom Lee
we read, we try to learn and we'll see just how much by your (much appreciated) comments - and so, another beginner charges (in):
Tulips, a fine spray
Bloemenmarket's scented carpet
guaranteed never-shrink
Mist powders gracht* foliage
faster than scant sun-breezes dust:
water off cygnets’ backs
“The Jewish Bride” hosts
immaculate despite centuries
dead flies at her hem
[*canal]
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10-16-2008, 05:10 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 4,717
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Haiku, in memory of the turtle.
bird's nest
balls of fluff
under your bed
winter coat
a shot of heat
red hair on the collar
Lee, you have been marvelous. If you have time, could you say if these are nearer haiku than my first attempts?
Cally
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10-16-2008, 05:50 PM
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Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Kalgoorlie
Posts: 752
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Cally. I used to live in the city where road kill was the norm daily- cats, dogs, brats,
Now in a town of 27000 workers there is not a rat to be seen squished. Seems we aim to kill for the thrill of it when not busy.
so I want to give your pet a new life ~~ henie
Turtle tin
In a spin
Middle of a road
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10-16-2008, 07:26 PM
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Distinguished Guest
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Lincoln, Illinois, USA
Posts: 265
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Quote:
Originally posted by Maryann Corbett:
Lee, thanks for all these generous insights. I'm going to try a revision of my lone effort to see if I'm any closer to getting it.
Icy walking bridge.
Below, the highway screams.
Even air is frozen.
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Maryann, It really would be much, much better if you could share more than one poem, but absent that please send both versions of this one. Lee
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