Showing posts with label butterfly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label butterfly. Show all posts

Thursday, October 8, 2020

Carpe Diem Celebrates Its 8th Anniversary, October 2020: Carpe Diem #1833 butterfly

 


Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

My apologies for not having published yesterday, I just had a busy day. Today I have a theme for you all to work with. This time I have chosen for a theme, we have seen here often: butterfly.

As you maybe know I am also a partcipant on MLMM, where I host the feature "Heeding Haiku With". This week I created a post on MLMM about "changing" and brought up a nice haiku that I love to share here first:

between the roses
a small cocoon moves on the breeze
awakening a butterfly

© Chèvrefeuille


Butterfly ... to me it means change ... 

This episode is NOW OPEN for your submissions and will remain open until October 13th 10:00 PM (CEST). Add your submission to the linking widget hidden in our logo hereafter.


Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Carpe Diem #1798 New Beginnings ... Metamorphosis


Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

Welcome at a new episode of our wonderful Kai, the place to be if you like to create Japanese poetry and share it with the world. This month is themed "New Beginnings" and there is an amazing new beginning in nature's small world of insects and butterflies.

Today I love to challenge you with "metamorphosis", that awesome idea of a caterpillar changing into a butterfly.

Metamorphosis

What a transformation this creature makes ... awesome!

This episode is NOW OPEN for your submissions and will remain open until January 22nd at noon (CEST). I will try to publish our new episode later on. Have fun!


Wednesday, October 9, 2019

Carpe Diem #1760 Butterfly (a Tan Renga challenge)


Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

Welcome at a new episode of our wonderful Kai. As you all know I didn't publish an episode on Wednesdays, but next week I will publish again on Wednesday, but not a regular episode, but a special one ... From next week on I will challenge you every Wednesday with a Tan Renga, as we do today.



Today I love to challenge you to create a Tan Renga with a given haiku. As you all know the goal of a so called "Tan Renga Challenge" is to add your 2nd stanza of two lines (approximately 7-7 syllables) to complete or continue the given haiku through association on the scenes and images in the haiku.

Here is the haiku to work with:

on the Honeysuckle
the fragile wings of a butterfly
a fluttering sound

© Chèvrefeuille (October 2012)

Butterfly On Honeysuckle (image found on Pinterest)

This episode is NOW OPEN for your submissions and will remain open until October 16th at noon (CEST). I will try to publish our new episode later on. For now ... have fun!

Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Carpe Diem #1635 "Go get yourself a saijiki and read it many times". Kigo: butterfly


Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

Welcome at a new episode of CDHK. We have left the Kumano Kodo to explore the modern and classical kigo (seasonword). Yesterday we had a classical kigo and today I will give you another classical kigo to work with.

First I love to give you a little bit more background on the classical kigo (seasonword):

Nature provides us with variuos phenomenon during the seasons, but NOT with words about them.

We humans make up words, classify them, write poetry with them and collect them in almanachs.
The Japanese have been the first to put their seasonal words into collections, call the short poems HAIKU and archived them in books called SAIJIKI, that is why even today as haiku poets we stick to these human conventions and we use these books as reference for our own haiku.


blossoms are a kigo for spring

Traditional Japanese haiku are about the many changes during the seasons (not simply about nature ! but about the seasonal changes of nature), the changes in the life of plants and animals, heaven and earth, but also the changes in the daily life of humans within the society, like festivals and food.

The Japanese saijiki started in a time when the Asian lunar calendar was used in Japan, so even now we have a sort of timeslip of one month between the ... natural phenomenon.. and the .. kigo about them ...
February, equated to the second lunar month, for example is early spring in the Asian Lunar Calendar system but late winter in the reality of the weather conditions in most parts of Japan.
Consider Northern Hokkaido and Southern Okinawa ... and yet Japanese haiku poets use the same saijiki when they write about natural phenomenon. (Source: World Kigo Base)

All these kigo (seasonwords) were gathered in a so called Saijiki: A Japanese saijiki is a handbook of the culture of Japan, a travelouge through their many festivals, a description of their food and drink, a celebration of their nature.
Kigo are not ment to be a weather forecast or a biology textbook, but a reference to these words used in the Japanese poetic cultural context.


Cherry Blossoms

Kigo are not simply seasonal words representing animals, plants and natural phenomenon, they also include local festivals and other human activities, and thus carry a lot of cultural background information.

The first advise of a haiku teacher (sensei) in Japan is always:
Go get yourself a saijiki and read it many times.

Well enough about the background on the kigo and the saijiki. Let me give you our classical kigo for spring to work with today. Today I have chosen for the classical kigo "choo" or "butterfly". Butterflies are seen for the first time in spring ... so that makes it a kigo for spring.

wake butterfly - 
it's late, we've miles
to go together


© Matsuo Basho

A beauty by my sensei, Basho (1644-1694), and here is another one, also by Basho:

wings of a butterfly
how many times do they flutter
over roof and wall




And of course I have also a haiku written by myself:

cobweb scattered
by the fluttering of wings
a blue butterfly

on the verandah
a yellowish butterfly
the light of sun down

© Chèvrefeuille

Wonderful haiku about butterflies, our classical kigo for spring to work with.

This episode is NOW OPEN for your submissions and will remain open until April 3rd at noon (CET). I will try to publish  our next episode later on.


Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Carpe Diem #1601 Tan Renga Challenge Month 2019 (5) the weight of a butterfly


Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

Welcome at a new episode of Carpe Diem Haiku Kai. This month it's Tan Renga Challenge month so every theme / prompt is a haiku by a modern or classical haiku poet and the goal is to create a Tan Renga with it by adding your two-lined second stanza of approximately 14 syllables. The second stanza you can create through association on the scene(s) in the given haiku.

Today I have a wonderful, not so well known haiku by female haiku master Chiyo-Ni. I think you all know her at least from her wonderful Morning Glory haiku. That Morning Glory haiku however is not the haiku to work with today.

Here is the haiku to work with:

waterweed
floating away, despite 
the butterfly's weight on it

© Chiyo-Ni (Tr. Ueda)


This episode is NOW OPEN for your submissions and will remain open until February 13th at noon (CET). I will try to publish our new episode later on.


Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Carpe Diem #1462 thin clothes (usumono)


Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

In winter we are wearing warm clothes, mostly made from thick fabrics, but as summer comes we change our clothes to more thin fabricated ones, because in the warmth, heat of summer that will keep us cool. Nowadays that custom is still in use I think, but ... maybe you are not someone that uses this custom.

Today's classical summer kigo is thin clothes (usumono) and I think it's an kigo we can work with. Today's episode will not be a long one, because of lack of time. So I leave you with this classical summer kigo: thin clothes (usumiono).

butterflies on summer-lilac

butterflies attend
the flowers of summer lilac (*)
nothing more, nothing less

© Chèvrefeuille

(*) Buddleia or Butterfly-bush

This episode is open for your submissions tonight at 7:00 PM (CEST) and will remain open until July 3rd at noon (CEST). I will try to publish our new episode later on. Have fun!

For our friends on the Southern Hemisphere I have another nice winter kigo: yellowtail (buri). Seliola quinqueradiata


Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Carpe Diem's Crossroads #4 morning breeze


Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

Welcome at a new episode of our (very) special feature "crossroads" in which I challenge you fuse two haiku into one haiku. As I have read you all like this feature and you all are becoming better and better in this fusion-haiku crafting.

At first I thought to use different poetry forms from Japan, but I think this feature is specific for haiku, because that's our main goal here at CDHK ... creating haiku. This "crossroads" feature is nice to make, but I think it also helps us all to improve our haiku writing skills.

This week I have chosen two haiku one by a classical haiku poet, Arakida Moritake (1473-1549) and a 'modern' haiku poet, Jane Reichhold (1937-2016). First I will give you the haiku by Moritake. This haiku you all will know I think, it's his most famous haiku:

A fallen blossom
returning to the bough, I thought --
But no, a butterfly.

© Arakida Moritake (Tr. Steven D. Carter)


photo © Chèvrefeuille
And here is the haiku by Jane Reichhold. She is still missed at Carpe Diem Haiku Kai. So let this "crossroads" episode be a little tribute too for her.

morning breeze
coming in the window
surf sounds

© Jane Reichhold

A nice set of haiku to work with and create a "fusion"-haiku with it. I have given it a try myself, but it wasn't easy:

the sound of the surf
enters my home through the open window
and a butterfly


© Chèvrefeuille

Well ... not a strong "fusion" haiku, but I like it.

This episode of "crossroads" is NOW OPEN for your submissions and will remain open until April 10th at noon (CEST). Have fun!


Sunday, March 25, 2018

Carpe Diem #1396 Unfold Your Own Myth


Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

Welcome at the last few episodes of this wonderful month. In this month I tried to inspire you through the Qu'ran and through the beautiful poems by Rumi. This month was awesome to create, but not easy to respond on. Next month we will dive into the "matter" of writing Haibun (Prose and poetry) and I think April will be a cool month too.

Today's poem for your inspiration is taken from "The Essential Rumi" by Coleman Barks and is titled "Make Your Own Myth". It's a nice poem and it describes the wonders of creating your own myth as e.g. Moses did or Napoleon. Everyone of us can create his / her own myth, but what do you create as you "create your own myth"?

Let me tell you in short what a myth is:

Myth is a folklore genre consisting of narratives that are ostensibly historical, though often supernatural, explaining the origins of a cultural practice or natural phenomenon. The word "myth" is derived from the Greek word mythos, which simply means "story". Mythology can refer either to the study of myths, or to a body or collection of myths. Myth can mean 'sacred story', 'traditional narrative' or 'tale of the gods'. A myth can also be a story to explain why something exists.

Stonehenge? A Myth?
Human cultures' mythologies usually include a cosmogonical or creation myth, concerning the origins of the world, or how the world came to exist. The active beings in myths are generally gods and goddesses, heroes and heroines, or animals and plants. Most myths are set in a timeless past before recorded time or beginning of the critical history. A myth can be a story involving symbols that are capable of multiple meanings.

A myth is a sacred narrative because it holds religious or spiritual significance for those who tell it. Myths are often therefore stories that are currently understood as being exaggerated or fictitious.

Myth ... a story to explain why something or someone exists and that's maybe the "deeper layer" in the poem by Rumi, which I will share hereafter. Rumi is known as the "Mystical Poet" and it's easy to see that "myth" is part of Mystic thought. So there is a reason why we exist ... 



Unfold Your Own Myth:

Who gets up early to discover the moment light begins?
Who finds us here circling, bewildered, like atoms?
Who comes to a spring thirsty
and sees the moon reflected in it?
Who, like Jacob blind with grief and age,smells the shirt of his lost son
and can see again?
Who lets a bucket down and brings up
a flowing prophet? Or like Moses goes for fire
and finds what burns inside the sunrise?

Jesus slips into a house to escape enemies,
and opens a door to the other world.
Solomon cuts open a fish, and there's a gold ring.
Omar storms in to kill the prophet
and leaves with blessings.
Chase a deer and end up everywhere!
An oyster opens his mouth to swallow one drop.
Now there's a pearl.

A vagrant wanders empty ruins.
Suddenly he's wealthy.

But don't be satisfied with stories, how things
have gone with others. Unfold
your own myth, without complicated explanation,
so everyone will understand the passage,
We have opened you.

Start walking toward Shams. Your legs will get heavy
and tired. Then comes a moment
of feeling the wings you've grown,
lifting.

© Rumi (The Essential Rumi by Coleman Barks)

A wonderful, very spiritual and mystical, poem I would say. Enough to become inspired by ... at least I hope that I have inspired you with this poem, because I wasn't inspired to create my inspired poetry after reading this poem.

Butterfly ... to unfold my own myth

making my own myth
feeling one with nature around me
I am a butterfly
born from the silk cocoon
made by a caterpillar

© Chèvrefeuille

Hm ... nice tanka (how immodest) after all I was inspired enough ...

This episode is open for your submissions right now and will remain open until April 1st at noon (CEST). I will try to publish our new episode, another beauty by Rumi, later on. For now ... have fun!


Friday, July 3, 2015

On The Trail With Basho Encore #7 butterflies


Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

I love butterflies, they're so fragile and I find them very beautiful. However I didn't write a lot of haiku about butterflies. I don't know why, but it could be a lack of inspiration.
I love to share haiku on butterflies for this episode of our special feature “On The Trail With Basho Encore” for example this haiku which he wrote for a woman named Butterfly when he was asked for.

ran no ka ya   cho no tusubasa ni   takimono su

orchid fragrance

from the butterfly's wings
scenting the clothes

(c) Basho



My first response on this haiku:


in the Buddleia
fluttering of fragile wings
waving on the wind


(c) Chèvrefeuille

Another one:

waving on the wind
butterflies resting in the sun
on the Buddleia


(c) Chèvrefeuille
In this episode I will look at a few haiku by Basho  in which he used butterfly as season word. (A season word is particular for one of the seasons, butterfly is a season word for summer).

cho no ha no   ikutabi koyuru   hei no yane

wings of a butterfly

how many times do they flutter
over roof and wall

kimi ya cho   ware ya Soji ga   yume gokoro

you are butterfly?

I am Chuang-tzu's
dreaming heart


Chuang-tzu is a well known classical author of China and Basho wrote this one for one of his friends named Dosui who was an enthusiastic reader of Chuang-tzu's work. According to Jane Reichhold however this one is an unconfirmed haiku by Basho.




Another butterfly haiku:

cho mo ki te   su wo suu kiku no   namasu kana

a butterfly also comes

to sip the vinegar from mums (*)
and pickles


(*) ‘mums’ is short for Chrysanthemums

With this one came a preface: 'While I was staying in Awazu, a man who liked tea ceremony very much, invited me and served vinegar boiled chrysanthemum flowers picked from a nearby beach'. He wrote this one for his host, a physician.

okiyo okiyo   waga tomo ni se n   nuru ko cho

wake up wake up
I want you for a friend
sleeping butterfly


This one is discussed by several authorities and they came to the conclusion that this one must be seen in relationship to the famous story of Chuang-tzu who dreamed he was a butterfly and then wondered which was real, his dream or his life as a human. (Source: Jane Reichhold's Old Pond: Basho's (almost) thousand haiku).
Others say that this haiku refers to one of Basho's (male) lovers. The truth will stay in the middle I think.

A last example of haiku on butterflies by Basho:

cho no tobu   bakari nonaka no   hikage kana

a butterfly flies
only in the field
of sunshine


What an awesome picture. A tiny butterfly dances in the wide field in the light of the sun.



Because I love the butterfly haiku by Basho. I will give another example. This is an impromptu verse.

monozuki ya   niowa nu kasa ni   tomaru cho

how curious
on grass without fragrance
perches a butterfly


Well ... I rest my case :-) All wonderful haiku by Basho about butterflies. To write myself a new one in the Spirit of Basho will not be easy, but ... I have to do what I have to do.

the cobweb scattered
by the fluttering of wings
a blue butterfly

on the veranda
a yellowish butterfly
the light of sun down


(c) Chèvrefeuille

Butterflies ... I love those tiny creatures, so fragile and yet so strong. I bow my head and thank the Gods for the butterflies.

I hope you did like this episode of "Encore" and that it will inspire you all to write an all new haiku or tanka and share it here with us.

This episode of "Encore" is NOW OPEN for your submissions and will remain open until next Friday 10th at noon (CET). Have fun!


Thursday, August 21, 2014

Carpe Diem's "Little Creatures" #2, "I dreamed I was a butterfly" (Soshi)


Dear haijin, visitors and travelers,

What a relief it was as I saw all of your wonderful responses on our first "Little Creatures" episode. It was a gamble as I created this new feature. I didn't know how you would respond, because I asked you, in the spirit of Basho and Issa, to look more closely to your surroundings and to point your attention to the little creatures, like bugs and small flowers, of our nature, that wonderful Creation, but I was stunned as I read your haiku, senryu, tanka, kyoka and haibun on Little Creatures.
This episode of Little Creatures could be easily also be an episode of Carpe Diem's "Sparkling Stars", because as far as I know, the haiku by Wafu, a not so wellknown haiku-poet, is just the only one Wafu ever wrote. At least, this haiku is the only one I know by Wafu.
In this haiku Wafu was inspired by a piece of poetry by Soshi (Chuangtse) who says the following:

[...] "Long ago I, Chuangtse, dreamed I was a butterfly, flitting about lightly on if I were really one, happily following my fancies. Suddenly awakening, again I was in the form of Chuangtse. Was it a case of Chuangtse dreaming he was a butterfly, or is it now that a butterfly is dreaming that it is Chuangtse? I do not know". [...]

Soshi's experience of the fact that he and the butterfly were one, has been shared by countless human beings to some degree; for example, Kotomichi (1798-1868):

my heart
that was rapt away
by the wild cherry-blossoms, -
will it return to my body
when they scatter?

Credits: Chuangtse's butterfly (woodblock-print)
What Soshi did was to name it by expressing it. Before it was named, it was formless, like a new-born child, inchoate, a day-dream in the mind of God. But when it had been enunciated, it had a soundless tone that still echoes faintly in the recesses of our soul, a life which still moves to be born again in the womb of our spirit. So Wafu's experience was not only of the butterfly before his eyes, but also of Soshi's, though not of two things. The coming back to himself was a feeling of loss and discomfort, typical of what the soul suffers upon alienation from God.

cho kiete tamashii ware ni kaeri keri

the butterfly having disappeared,
my spirit
came back to me

© Wafu

Isn't it wonderful? Wafu has a feeling of loss, he feels lonely, could be even a 'near death experience', but than, suddenly his spirit returns to him!
Or was it lack of inspiration? And after a while or a long time, his inspiration came back to him. Don't we all have those periods in which we have no inspiration? Don't worry than ... the butterfly will return to you!

wandering through the meadow
following the path of butterflies -
I find my spirit

© Chèvrefeuille

I hope you did like this episode and I hope that it will inspire you to write an all new haiku on a little creature. For now ... have fun!

This episode is NOW OPEN for your submissions and will remain open until August 28th at noon (CET).


Friday, June 27, 2014

Carpe Diem Tan Renga Challenge #41, ''a fallen flower'' by Moritake


Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

Another week has gone ... time flies ... I had a busy week, but that's no problem. Time is always on my side, sometimes ... I have lack of time, but I think everyone of us will have sometimes lack of time ... well that's life isn't it?
This week's Tan Renga Challenge is a bit different with the other weeks. This week I love to share a haiku by Arakida Moritake (1473-1549), a Japanese poet who also wrote haiku (in his time it was called haikai or hokku). I remember that the first haiku I read was a Dutch translation of a wonderful haiku written by Moritake. I think that you know this haiku, because it's a wellknown haiku.

a fallen flower
flew back to its perch
a  butterfly

© Moritake

Credits: © Shelly Osborne

It's a wonderful haiku I think and it made that I became ''hungry'' for more haiku ... well ... I am over 25 years a haiku-poet and haiku still catches me ... it's my passion (next to my work ofcourse).

The goal is to write a second stanza towards the haiku by Moritake. That second stanza has two lines with the syllables count 7-7, but as you all know ... you don't have to use that 7-7 syllables count for the second stanza, but if you would like to use it ... feel free.

Here is my attempt to complete the Tan Renga:

a fallen flower
flew back to its perch
a butterfly
                                     (Moritake)

colorful leaves swirling
through the empty streets
              (Chèvrefeuille)

A nice continuation I think, but that's up to you to say ... Now it's your turn to make this Tan Renga complete. Have fun!

This Tan Renga Challenge is NOW OPEN for your submissions and will remain open until next Friday at noon (CET).


Thursday, June 5, 2014

Carpe Diem #485, Oneness


Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

Another day has gone by and I am preparing our next episode, Oneness, for our daily haiku meme here at Carpe Diem Haiku Kai. It's an every day joy to prepare these posts and I am glad that these can and may inspire you all.

Before I go on with our episode of today I love to tell you first something about the up-coming months (July & August). First July, A few days ago I watched an incredible program on Discovery World, Joanna Lumley's Nile, in which Joanna Lumley explores the longest river on earth. As I watched all those wonderful and incredible beautiful places along the Nile I thought "maybe we can make that same journey along the longest river of the Earth, the Nile, with Carpe Diem Haiku Kai". So I will prepare (i hope) a wonderful prompt-list in July.

Credits: The Nile, Egypt

Second, I have read wonderful comments about the music of BrunuhVille and in August in think I will have a whole month with music by BrunuhVille for prompts, as we have done earlier, but I haven't yet decided that.

Back to our episode of today. Today our prompt is 'Oneness' and Jane Reichhold gave the following examples for this modern kigo of summer:

the narrow bed
we breath each other
all afternoon


on bare arms
the noon-day sun melted
hot metal sweet
before the summer storm
rises the close smell
of two skins


© Jane Reichhold

A nice trio of haiku I think ... three completely different haiku too, but I like them all ... and I hope I can write my own 'Oneness'-haiku in that way ...

Credits: Courting Butterflies

almost as one
courting butterflies on poppies -
summer afternoon


© Chèvrefeuille

I hope you do like this haiku inspired on Oneness ... and I hope it will inspire you all to write your own haiku.
This episode is NOW OPEN for your submissions and will remain open until June 8th at noon (CET). I will try to post our new episode, Satisfaction, later on today. For now ... have fun!

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Carpe Diem Special #24, Butterfly by Chiyo-Ni



Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

On the last day of February I love to share another wonderful haiku by Chiyo-Ni, our haiku master for this month. Chiyo-Ni, a female haiku master and a nun, wrote wonderful haiku as we have seen during this February Carpe Diem month. Today this is the haiku written by Chiyo-Ni for your inspiration:


In mid-flight
the butterfly returns
to the pines of Shiogoshi Shrine

(* I couldn't find the Romaji translation of this haiku)

In this haiku Chiyo-Ni describes a butterfly returning to home, the Shiogoshi Shrine, is she talking about herself? Maybe she does ... Shiogoshi Shrine was a Buddhist Shrine ... so maybe she went back to that shrine. By the way I couldn't find anything on Shiogoshi Shrine, but when I was preparing this episode of Carpe Diem a fragment of Basho's 'Narrow Road to the Deep North' or 'Oku No Hosomichi' came in mind. In that fragment Basho tells us about the pine trees of Shiogoshi.
Credits: Shiogoshi Pines
(by the way this link brings you to a wonderful website)

I love to share that fragment with you here:
[...] I stopped overnight at the Zenshoji Temple near the castle of Daishoji, still in the province of Kaga. Sora, too, had stayed here the night before and left behind the following poem:
All night long
I listened to the autumn wind
Howling on the hill
At the back of the temple.
Sora and I were separated by the distance of a single night, but it was just the same as being separated by a thousand miles. I, too, went to bed amidst the howling of the autumn wind and woke up early the next morning amid the chanting of the priests, which was soon followed by the noise of the gong calling us to breakfast. As I was anxious to cross over to the province of Echizen in the course of the day, I left the temple without lingering, but when I reached the foot of the long approach to the temple, a young priest came running down the steps with a brush and ink and asked me to leave a poem behind. As I happened to notice some leaves of willow scattered in the garden, I wrote impromptu,
I hope to have gathered
To repay your kindness
The willow leaves
Scattered in the garden.
and left the temple without even taking time to refasten my straw sandals.
Hiring a boat at the port of Yoshizaki on the border of the province of Echizen, I went to see the famous pine of Shiogoshi . (There is a deep bay here where the priest Rengyo in 1471 built a residence at Yoshizaki. It is a sacred site for the Shinshu sect. On a promontory called Shiogoshi opposite Yoshizaki there is a cluster of pine trees greatly prized for their shapely limbs. Yoshitsune also passed this way on his way to Hiraizumi.)

The entire beauty of this place, I thought, was best expressed in the following poem by Saigyo.
Inviting the wind to carry
Salt waves of the sea,
The pine tree of Shiogoshi
Trickles all night long
Shiny drops of moonlight.
Should anyone ever dare to write another poem on this pine tree it would be like trying to add a sixth finger to his hand. [...]  (Source: Shiogoshi Pines)

It's really a wonderful haibun 'Oku no Hosomichi' and I love to read it again and again. OK ... enough about the Pines of Shiogoshi ... let's go back to Chiyo-Ni's haiku:

In mid-flight
the butterfly returns
to the pines of Shiogoshi Shrine

To write a new haiku in the same tone and Spirit as this one by Chiyo-Ni will not be easy, but of course I have to try ...

sweet scent of pines
on the ancestor shrine -
Father's Day

Hm ... what do you think?

This prompt will stay on 'till March 1st 11.59 AM (CET) and I will post our first Carpe Diem episode of March, Risshun (coming of Spring), around 10.00 PM (CET). By the way in our Carpe Diem month March are all the prompts classical Japanese kigo or seasonwords for Spring.





Monday, February 25, 2013

Carpe Diem #131, Caterpillar



Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

Another day will soon be coming, as I prepare this episode I am in the Nightshift and I have found a little bit of time to work at my weblog. I have read wonderful haiku last days on 'full snow moon', 'castle', 'forsythia' and a lot more. I have tried to visit you all, but I haven't commented every where, not because I don't want to, but by lack of time.

Today we share haiku on 'Caterpillar', a lovely and mysterious creature. And in a lot of shapes and colors. Look for example to this 'Wattle Cup Caterpillar':


Credits: Wattle Cup Caterpillar

Isn't it a wonderful Caterpillar? Looks like a Chinese Dragon and that inspired me to write the next haiku:

dancing dragon
in a tiny insects world
Wattle Cup

Hm ... nice ...

Of course I can't go pass the metamorphosis of the Caterpillar, through cocoon to butterfly. It's such a magical and mysterious manner of Mother Nature ... I am always in awe as I see how a caterpillar becomes a butterfly ... really it's a wonder.

Source: Metamorphosis

To write a haiku on Metamorphosis that's a real challenge to me ... so here I go ... a first try:

beneath a green leaf
her cocoon is cracking open
a young butterfly

Another one ... on metamorphosis:

Pygmalion's lesson
every man and woman has to be
like a caterpillar

like a caterpillar
growing to the next level
become a butterfly

Well ... I hope you enjoyed the read and I hope that this read will inspire you to create your own haiku on 'Caterpillar' and maybe on metamorphosis. Share your haiku with our community here on Carpe Diem.

This prompt will stay on 'till February 27th 11.59 AM (CET) and I will post our new episode, 'Strangers'  (provided by Patricia of High Five and Raspberries), later on today around 10.00 PM (CET).



Saturday, February 16, 2013

Carpe Diem #123, Bell (provided by Dulcina)



Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,

Another day to be inspired and share haiku with Carpe Diem. Today our prompt is 'Bell' (provided by Dulcina of Dulcina's Garden). At the start of Carpe Diem I had already used 'Wedding Bells', so first I thought 'Bell' isn't a good prompt, but after a while ... I think 'Bell' is a wonderful prompt to share haiku on. So today we share haiku on 'Bell'. 

I have found a wonderful haiku written by Buson, one of the four greatest haiku masters, and I love to share that with you:

tsuriganeni tomarite nemuru kochoukana

On a temple bell
Alights and naps
A butterfly


I like the fragility of the butterfly napping on the big temple bell.



Credits: Temple Bell

Wow isn't it a beauty this temple bell? A great source of inspiration I think, but what do you think of Mr. Bell, the man of the telephone? Could also be a source of inspiration, but that's up to you.

I have chosen for the temple bell as source for my inspiration.

from far away
the sound of the temple bell
echoing through the mist

echoing through the mist
the strong sound of a temple bell -
scared butterfly

scared butterfly
flies in from far away
temple bell - dreams


Have fun with this prompt and share your haiku with us ...

By the way: I am a bit behind with commenting, but I will try to catch up ... forgive me if I haven't commented on your post.

This prompt will stay on 'till February 18th 11.59 AM (CET) and I will post, 'Iceberg' (provided by YerPirate) later on today around 10.00 PM (CET).




Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Carpe Diem Special #3

SPECIAL #3
Howdy my dear haijin, visitors and travelers,

A new Special today. The haiku by Basho he has written in the Summer of 1685. He was an well respected haiku master now and had several students. It's in this time (the last ten years of his life) that he travels a lot. His haibun 'Oku no Hosomichi' is one of his most known haibun. However the haiku for today isn't part of that haibun.
Basho's legacy of haiku are mostly haiku he used in Renga sessions. A Renga was a chain of poems and was written with more than two poets. Renga was a game that was played often at the Imperial Court. Basho was the haiku master that brought this game to the people and made it a joyful activity.

Matsuo Basho (1644-1694)
Well ... so far a little background on Basho. Let's look at today's haiku.

a butterfly flies
only in the field
of sunshine


It's a nice haiku and I can see the scene in front of my eyes. A meadow bathing in the sun, full of blooming flowers, the sound of a summer breeze and the dancing butterflies. A sereen scene ... almost meditative. How to write a haiku on this one ... with the same feeling?

sunlit meadow
butterflies dancing together
from flower to flower


Another one:

dancing butterflies
the scent of a sunlit meadow
ah! the summer breeze


Well ... I think I have caught the essence of Basho's haiku. It was really a joy to compose these two haiku with the one of Basho for an inspiration.



This Special will stay on 'till October 19th 11.59 AM (CET). Our new prompt for October 19th will be religion and will be published today around 10.00 PM (CET).

Enjoy writing haiku, be inspired ... see you tomorrow.