Haiku Master Basho

Matsuo Basho is the Japanese saint of Haiku. Of samurai heritage, he lived in the 17th century and had an enormous following. His complete works, consisting of 1011 haiku, have recently been collected and translated by Jane Reichhold and can be found in Basho The Complete Haiku (Tokyo: Kodansha International, 2008).

It is my humble intention to also write 1011 haiku, one each day. I began in August 2009 and by my estimation, should finish in May 2012. Traditionally haiku was concerned with nature, but today our "nature" has changed. New technology has replaced the winds of nature as the force in our times. What was a rock is now a computer key. What was a cherry blossom is now a world wide web of information. What was light, is now the speed of light. Haiku is about finding an essence, thus these writings will seek to find the essence of our lives today.

A note for the reader: an important aspect of haiku is that the reader can put as much of herself/himself into the piece as the writer. If a haiku is good it will become your meaning not mine. Wish me luck! When the project is complete, if only one of the 1011 haiku approaches the skill and mastery of Basho, I will be satisfied.




Saturday, October 24, 2009

What is Nu Haiku?

What is Haiku? Haiku is a traditional Japanese poetry form that was used as far back as the 15th century.
Haiku deals with the abstract and the metaphysical, rather than the particular.

Traditional haiku follows a strict pattern of seventeen syllables spread over three lines in a 5-7-5 pattern.

What is Nu?

The female aspect of Nu in Egyptian mythology is represented by a snake called Nunet. Nu net. New Net. New Haiku on the Internet.

Nu is an Egyptian reference to a primordial watery place that is the chaos before the cosmic order was formed.

Nu is the 13th letter of the Greek alphabet.

Nu is also an internet countrycode top-level domain popular in the Nordic countries.

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