A haiku is a non-rhymed verse genre. In Japanese, haiku has five syllables/sounds in the first line, seven in the second, and five again in the last line . In Japanese, the word "haiku" means "playful verse." More important than form is that a haiku contain a "kigo" (season word) and employ the equivalent to a "kireji" (cutting word), which means that the poem should present two juxtaposed parts in three lines. In addition, haiku should use objective sensory images, and avoid subjective commentary.
Little fuzzy ducks
Ran over by giant trucks
Duck soup for dinner.
Oh, gawd, you guys are crazy.
ReplyDeleteI hope none of these ducks ended up in your soup :) I like that you posted the instructins for writing a Haiku.
ReplyDeleteHahaha, my favorite is still:
ReplyDeleteHaikus are easy.
But sometimes they don’t make sense.
Refrigerator
Poor fuzzy ducks... love the fisheye photo... what a lot of lovely mallard ducks... love the boys emerald heads...
ReplyDeleteHaha, cute.
ReplyDeleteHahahah...never heard of Haiku...You learn something new everyday :) I love the picture.
ReplyDeleteLove the photo and your Haiku! :)
ReplyDeleteGroucho Marx eat your heart out :-)
ReplyDeletethat is sooooooooooo cool, fish eye? love it!!
ReplyDeleteOh, those poor, poor ducks
ReplyDeleteAnd those nasty, heavy trucks
Squished feathery soup.
Looks like this was taken w/ a fisheye lens?? I love it...so many of them! I hope they find a safer spot though!
ReplyDeleteYou are Funny!
ReplyDeleteI hope you drive to work together more often if this is the result! Wonderful ... both haiku and photo!
ReplyDeleteI love Haikus, but not this one! Poor duckies! ;) Love your photo, as always.
ReplyDelete(P.S. I have relatives in Manitowoc.)
They died for a good cause. Pass me some!
ReplyDeletelove it~ picture & haiku. how'd you get your picture to look that way? did you use a special lens or do that in post processing? hope all is well. have a great day.
ReplyDeleteI can't stop laughing!!!
ReplyDelete