Go Take A Haiku, Part Deux
Dear SunWinkers!
We’ve been talking about haiku, that ancient Japanese party game. Instead of gathering together to play Twister or Grand Theft Auto, 12th century Japanese poets would get together and write renga, collaborative poems of verses in syllables 5-7-5, 7-7, 5-7-5, 7-7, etc., going around the room, each person contributing another verse, ultimately running to hundreds, even thousands of verses. It was quite an honor to be chosen to contribute the starting verse, called the hokku.Poets would come to renga parties prepared with dozens of hokku, and would inevitably go home with lots of leftover hokku. So they would publish books of hokku, and hokku became an art form unto itself.
About the 16th century, various art forms became the province of the hoi polloi rather than just the royalty; these included Kabuki theatre, woodblock prints, and hokku. The popular hokku degenerated into something very much the equivalent of the bawdy limerick. They called these haikai, which means “unusual fun.” Basho (1644-1694) is credited with raising the art of the hokku/haikai once again to something more sublime. What’s easy to overlook is that Basho and others did not always have their heads in the clouds. They were not above writing personal, droll epigrams and even getting scatological.
(The term haiku, by the way—it means “unusual verse”—emerged only in the 20th century and was actually unknown to the likes of Basho and Buson.)
So, here are some examples of haikai by the great haiku poets:
The dream I had
of being stabbed…was for real!
Bitten by a flea
Kikaku
The roadside thistle, eager
to see the travelers pass
was eaten by the passing ass!
Basho
Even at the time
when my father lay dying
I still kept farting
Sokan
Thud thud
upon the flowers
drops the horse turd
Issa
Tub to tub
The whole journey
Just hubbub!
Issa
[Issa is talking about one’s whole lifetime being framed by two baths, the newborn being cleaned off just after birth, and the corpse being cleansed in preparation for burial.]
Men are disgusting
They argue over
the price of orchids
Shiki
There’s no loincloth
on that butt blown in view
in the spring breeze
Buson
Tell them
I was a persimmon eater
who liked haiku
Shiki
I’m trying to sleep
Go easy
when you swat flies
Shiki
Now, when I wrote my haiku series last fall, a colleague remarked of one or more, in effect, “I don’t think that’s really a haiku. Maybe it’s a senryu.” I was a bit chaffed by this. My reaction was something like Sure it is! and so what if it isn’t? I didn’t put it that way to her. I suggested perhaps it was an American haiku, or an ironic haiku. So, I was delighted to discover there’s a name for what I was doing, namely haikai.
Here is a sampling of my favorite original haikai, along with a couple by modern Western poets:
sitting in my own poo
smearing it on my face
it’s great to be me
Constant pang of dread
in the pit of my stomach—
it’s my ulcer app.
Challenger explodes
due to reckless optimism.
Teacher’s last lesson.
Pixels draw you near
You answer my cyber-ad
Cling like silicon
Before my lawn mower
Butterfly clings to clover
Goodbye, butterfly
DW

A piece of green pepper
fell
off the wooden salad bowl:
so what?
Richard Brautigan
After weeks of watching the roof leak
I fixed it tonight
by moving a single board
Gary Snyder
The Prompt
Write one or more haikai.
Post your response on your blog. If it’s a WordPress blog, tag it WeSun. Or put it in a Note on Facebook or some such functionality, something you can link to. Then comment to this post with the link.
Sources/For Further Reading:
Faubion Bowers, ed.: The Classic Tradition of Haiku; Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, Inc., 1996.
X.J. Kennedy: An Introduction to Poetry, 5th Ed.; Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1982.
Ron Padgett, ed.: The Teachers and Writers Handbook of Poetic Forms; New York: Teachers & Writers Collaborative, 1987.
Reblogged this on Writing Essential Group and commented:
Today’s WEG Sunday Prompt!
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Ha Ha, you’re original, Doug! I have a question – this is not about syllable counts at all, but just at saying something? Wrong/right?
The only one I’ve know about is the 5-7-5, which is the newer form, other than senya. (nature versus emotions)
I want to play, but I need to know how to play. Promise I won’t write about poo 🙂
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not strictly. let’s say 2-4 lines, 17 syllables, more or less.
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Thanks for more enlightenment on Japanese poetry. So, the content of haikai should be crude and rude and fun!.
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if you like. crude is optional. 😉
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Sitting in my own poo. Yuck, but creative.
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It does happen! 🙂
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Between Len’s vampires, your haikaii, my celery and carrots, wait, never mind about those, they are my problem, the hair dye that didn’t get done and all those apples – those three other places that I’m writing for, and I am officially taking weekends off, but will play catch-up, dye the hair, finish the stir fry and make the applesauce, after I scream…..and curse, which none of you can hear (be happy), my cat who wants a blog…..PAA, bubbles, tips and mintwhatever, that report I didn’t write…
I’m glad I can laugh at this, because otherwise, I’d be upset. Oh garbage, I forgot to eat! Back later 🙂
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Mare, you forgot to eat your garbage. Sounds like my kind of cooking.
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Got it, Doug,
Seventeen syllables, more or less. Wherever they end up.
Pam, I did not eat the garbage. (today)
😀
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lovely
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The poo haiku is actually a disguised, metaphorical indictment of a certain class of journalists… No, really…
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Doug,
The more I look at this theme, the more I like it.
Okay, I guess you don’t get the email around here either,
here’s mine:
I am late, our fridge went.
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