What is Haiku?
That is an excellent question. Haiku is a highly misunderstood art form. Misinformation abounds, so much that it is hard to decipher just exactly what a haiku is. My dictionary, Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary, defines haiku as an unrhymed Japanese verse form of three lines containing 5,7,5 syllables respectively; also: a poem in this form. Okay, with this information I am going to give you instructions on how to get a better understanding of haiku:
Step 1.) Get out your own personal English Language dictionary and open it to the page on haiku.
Step 2.) Firmly grasp the edge of the page and look at it.
Step 3.) Before you can read the definition of haiku in your dictionary tear out the page.
Step 4.) At this point, you might want to read over the other definitions on the page you just tore out and jot down any you think might be worth keeping.
Step 5.) Burn that page and flush the ashes down the toilet.
Step 6.) Completely forget the definition I gave you in the second paragraph above. Yes, completely.
Assuming you haven't set off any smoke alarms, or set your house on fire, hopefully you are ready to learn a bit about haiku. Now that we have befouled the dictionary, we need a new definition for haiku. I offer what I think is the best definition I have seen:
"A haiku is a short poem recording the essence of a moment keenly perceived in which Nature is linked to human nature."
Cor van den Heuvel, The Haiku Anthology W.W. Norton & Company, New York, London
Okay... for the time being, forget about syllables, lines, and Japanese Geishas, well not the geishas. I will discuss form in subsequent articles. In my opinion, the form of haiku is secondary to the concepts outlined in the above definition. My opinion is supported by a number of highly recognized haiku experts; however this viewpoint is also opposed by a number of highly recognized experts.
When reading or writing haiku, I think you need to consider several key words in the quote above. Like haiku, a lot is said in those few words. The key words I would like you to consider are:
recording
moment
perceived
Nature
Think about these words in the context of the quote. I would like to discuss each one.
Recording -- Basically, in haiku you should observe and record an event or image, nothing more, nothing less. Well, yes there is something more... you should observe, recognize a unique aspect of what you observe and record. What this means is that when you write of the image or event you should not embellish or interpret. In your haiku, you should present what you saw, allowing the reader to interpret your words.
summer day
the sun shines like
an orange lollypop
Unfortunately, in this haiku, I have done the interpreting. I tell the reader what to think: that the sun shines like an orange lollypop.
summer day
sunlight on
my orange lollypop