Japanese Haiku

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Japanese Haiku by Peter Beilenson, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Peter Beilenson ISBN: 9781465576798
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Peter Beilenson
ISBN: 9781465576798
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
THE hokku or more properly haiku is a tiny verse-form in which Japanese poets have been working for hundreds of years. Originally it was the first part of the tanka, a five-line poem, often written by two people as a literary game: one writing three lines, the other, two lines capping them. But the hokku, or three-line starting verse, became popular as a separate form. As such it is properly called haiku, and retains an incredible popularity among all classes of Japanese. There are only seventeen syllables in the haiku, the first and third lines contain five, the second line seven. There is almost always in it the name of the season, or a key word giving the season by inference. (This is a short-cut, costing the poet only one or two syllables, whereby the reader can immediately comprehend the weather, the foliage, the bird and insect-life?and the emotions traditional to the season: factors which almost always are important in the poem.) But there is also, in a good haiku, more than a mere statement of feeling or a picture of nature: there is an implied identity between two seemingly different things. The greatest of haiku-writers, and the poet who crystallized the style, was Basho (1644-1694). In his later years he was a student of Zen Buddhism, and his later poems, which are his best, express the rapturous awareness in that mystical philosophy of the identity of life in all its forms. With this awareness, Basho immersed himself in even the tiniest things, and with religious fervor and sure craftsmanship converted them into poetry. He was ardently loved by his followers, and by later poets, and his Zen philosophy has thus been perpetuated in later haiku. It is, indeed, a key to the completest appreciation of most haiku. Following Basho in time and fame was Buson (1715-1783)?a little more sophisticated and detached than his predecessor, and an equally exquisite craftsman. The third great haiku poet was unhappy Issa (1763-1827), a continual butt of fate. He is less poetic but more lovable than Basho and Buson. His tender, witty haiku about his dead children, his bitter poverty, his little insect friends, endear him to every reader. Other masters are of course represented here too.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
THE hokku or more properly haiku is a tiny verse-form in which Japanese poets have been working for hundreds of years. Originally it was the first part of the tanka, a five-line poem, often written by two people as a literary game: one writing three lines, the other, two lines capping them. But the hokku, or three-line starting verse, became popular as a separate form. As such it is properly called haiku, and retains an incredible popularity among all classes of Japanese. There are only seventeen syllables in the haiku, the first and third lines contain five, the second line seven. There is almost always in it the name of the season, or a key word giving the season by inference. (This is a short-cut, costing the poet only one or two syllables, whereby the reader can immediately comprehend the weather, the foliage, the bird and insect-life?and the emotions traditional to the season: factors which almost always are important in the poem.) But there is also, in a good haiku, more than a mere statement of feeling or a picture of nature: there is an implied identity between two seemingly different things. The greatest of haiku-writers, and the poet who crystallized the style, was Basho (1644-1694). In his later years he was a student of Zen Buddhism, and his later poems, which are his best, express the rapturous awareness in that mystical philosophy of the identity of life in all its forms. With this awareness, Basho immersed himself in even the tiniest things, and with religious fervor and sure craftsmanship converted them into poetry. He was ardently loved by his followers, and by later poets, and his Zen philosophy has thus been perpetuated in later haiku. It is, indeed, a key to the completest appreciation of most haiku. Following Basho in time and fame was Buson (1715-1783)?a little more sophisticated and detached than his predecessor, and an equally exquisite craftsman. The third great haiku poet was unhappy Issa (1763-1827), a continual butt of fate. He is less poetic but more lovable than Basho and Buson. His tender, witty haiku about his dead children, his bitter poverty, his little insect friends, endear him to every reader. Other masters are of course represented here too.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Bertha's Christmas Vision: An Autumn Sheaf by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book The Weird Orient: Nine Mystic Tales by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book Sherlock Holmes: The Creeping Man by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book Count Alexis: Being the Voluptuous and Merry Adventures of a Bachelor by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book The Russian Turmoil Memoirs: Military, Social, and Political by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book Brahma Knowledge by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book Southern Arabia by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book The Romance of Biography or Memoirs of Women Loved and Celebrated by Poets, from The Days of The Troubadours to The Present Age (Complete) by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book An Account of Timbuctoo and Housa Territories in The interior of Africa by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book God and The King by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book Afloat at Last: A Sailor Boy's Log of His Life at Sea by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book Bundling; Its Origin, Progress and Decline in America by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book Garman and Worse: A Norwegian Novel by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book Vecchie Storie d'amore by Peter Beilenson
Cover of the book The Chaucer Story Book by Peter Beilenson
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy