[712] Haiku
Guest poem submitted by Sidharth Jaggi, <jaggi@>:
The seashore temple...
Incoming rollers flow in time
To the holy flute.
-- Yosa Buson
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Words mean more to one if they have some immediate relevance; in my case it
was the sheer coincidence of seeing a brass plate with the above haiku on it
in the promenade while roller-blading down the waterfront of San Francisco.
Since I've seen a translation of the above with the operative word
substituted with 'breakers' I guess the pun was unintentional, but...
<grin>.
But that isn't quite all; the poem, if anything, is the city of San
Francisco. It's a lovely lovely city with ups and downs and
all-the-way-arounds, and try going along the seashore on a sunny morning and
see if you don't think the haiku has it about right.
Sidharth.
[Minstrels Links]
Poem #23, Poem #57 and Poem #277 are all classic haiku; the first two
are by Basho, the third by Buson.
Poem #198, "Japanese Jokes", is Peter Porter's witty take on this very
distinctive genre.
Poem #87, by Yakamochi is an example of 'tanka', the predecessor of the
haiku form.