|
|
sunflower petals
hold on to last summer day —
with a warm embrace
|
Author Notes
HAIKU is a Japanese short unrhymed poem that uses imagistic language to express the essence of a deeply felt moment in time. It resonates on a deeper level, leaving the reader enlightened and making an insightful connection between the top two lines and the last one, called the SATORI. HAIKU uses a dash to pause before the SATORI. It originated in the thirteenth century and was mastered a century later by Matsuo Basho.
Haiku is about nature and how humans relate to it. It alludes to a season of the year. In Japan, haiku is written in 17 syllables and three lines ( 5/7/5) but in English is 17 syllables OR LESS because English syllables are longer than Japanese syllables. Avoid capitalization (except proper names) and punctuation.
Haiku Information:
click here to read haiku examples by �¢??the Haiku Society of America�¢??
click here to read Haiku Society of America HAIKU RULES
click here to read why is 5/7/5 OR LESS rule
Thank you very much for taking the time to read and review my poem.
Gypsy
"Poetry heals the wounds inflicted by reason." - Novalis
pictures from pinterest
|
|
©
Copyright 2024.
Gypsy Blue Rose
All rights reserved.
Gypsy Blue Rose
has granted FanStory.com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work. |