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I had to write a haiku on our prompt for today 'New Year's Eve (toshi no yo) and this is what it became:
nothing changed
still the same haiku poet
New Year's Eve
New Year's Eve
the rustling of Camellia flowers
nothing changed
See you all another time ...
This blog is about haiku. A classical haiku counts 5-7-5 syllables. Chèvrefeuille (the pseudonym of Kristjaan Panneman, a Dutch haiku poet) however writes his haiku in the Kanshicho-style. In the Kanshicho-style the classical syllable count isn't used. Matsuo Basho (1644-1694), a haiku poet, wrote his haiku in Kanshicho-style for several years, but he returned to the classical way of haiku writing. !!! Anonymous comments will be seen as SPAM !!!.
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Tuesday, December 11, 2012
New Year's Eve
Labels:
Camellia,
Carpe Diem,
haiku,
New Year's Eve
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3 comments:
Ha, the Carmellia flowers come back again :-) very nice.
Weaving a combination!! :)
Everything is always changing,
only God remains the same.
Every day we die and little,
- one day more, one day less -
flowers last just a few days...
The rustling of the camellia
sounds different
with every drop of rain...
The same haiku poet
is growing older
in each poem he creates...
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