My Haiku
April 17th is the day the whole world honors haiku. Haiku is a Japanese poem of seventeen syllables, in three lines of five, seven, and five, traditionally evoking images of the natural world.
Over the wintry
Forest, winds howl in rage
With no leaves to blow. ~ Natsume Soseki
Consider me
As one who loves poetry
And persimmons. ~ Masaoka Shiki
Lighting one candle
With another candle - -
Spring evening. ~ Yosa Buson
My life, -
How much more if it remains?
The night is brief. ~ Masaoka Shiki
The lamp once out
Cool stars enter
The window frame. ~ Natsume Soseki
While you decline to cry,
High on the mountainside
A single stalk of plumgrass wilts. ~ O no Yasumaro
From time to time
The clouds give rest
To the moon – beholders. ~ Matsuo Basho
A cicada shell,
It sends itself
Utterly away. ~ Matsuo Basho
For me going
For you staying here
Two autumns. ~ Masaoka Shiki
One flower
On the Cliffside
Nodding at the canyon. ~ Jack Kerouac
Before the white chrysanthemum
The scissors hesitate
A moment. ~ Yosa Buson
A cuckoo sings
To me, to the mountain,
To me, to the mountain. ~ Kobayashi Issa
Don’t imitate me;
it’s as boring
as the two halves of a melon. ~ Matsuo Basho
Night; and once again,
The while I wait for you, cold wind
Turns into rain. ~ Masaoka Shiki
Watch birth and death:
The lotus has already
Opened its flower. ~ Natsume Soseki
By definition, haikus evoke imagery of nature, thus, leaving you doubly spellbound - visually and verbally. And add to it the beauty of life, love, and loss. You have just read a few haikus that say what we have been wanting to say forever but could not find the right words. We hope you enjoyed!