Welcome to Haiku Heights!



Welcome to Haiku Heights, a place for weekly Haiku prompts. Every Saturday, some time between 9AM and 12PM IST, I'll give a word as the theme for the week's haiku. You are free to use it as you feel appropriate (in a Haiku, or Senryu ; not a free verse). You can use the word, or build upon its meaning, the only rule here is that it should sync with the topic.! We hope you enjoy sharing your haiku with us here each week.

If you are a contributor here, you can also suggest topics for future prompts. I'll save your suggestions and pick up one from the list at random each Sunday! You can suggest at the prompt suggestions page.


Saturday, July 28, 2012

#155 - Forget-me-not



Welcome to Haiku Heights. This is our first theme of our third year, and the 155th of our existence. My name is Leo, author of the blog "I Rhyme Without Reason" and your host here. Claude Lopez Ginisty of the blog "Bashō's Frog" suggests the theme FORGET-ME-NOT to write a haiku. Have fun!

So what is, a forget-me-not?

for·get-me-not (4 syllables)
noun.
- Any of various herbaceous plants of the genus Myosotis, having clusters of small blue flowers.


This prompt will end at on 4th AUGUST 2012 at 1PM IST.

These are the general rules here. I rephrase them just so no confusion exists.

1. Write a haiku on the prompt given and post in your blog.
2. Link back to Haiku Heights either with the code given in the bottom bar here, or with a hyperlink.
3. Enter your name and link into the Linky widget. (It should be the post link, and not your blog link in general)
4. Read and enjoy as many of the other writers as well. 

  • Haiku is Japanese poetry form that has three meaningful lines which are complete and reflecting nature.
  • Haiku have syllabic limitations as well. Syllables and words aren't the same thing. For e.g. the single word "traditional" would have four syllables since it's pronounced "tra-di-tio-nal".
  • A haiku is more showing than telling. It brings the meaning to you without actually expressing it.
  • A haiku has under, or at most, 17 syllables. If you wish to follow a rigid structure for your haiku, you can use a 5-7-5 syllable form, or a 3-5-3 syllable form.
  • You can write either a haiku, senryu (haiku related to emotions), haiga (haiku on picture) or haibun (story with haiku).

We wish to celebrate the haikai forms through your words. some poets are straying away from the Haiku format so kindly stay within the Haiku limitations. I know it is difficult but very challenging too!!

Thank you. for more details READ HERE.

Please note: I will remove the link if the post is just a random one or another form.

Please note: The plural of Haiku is still Haiku and not Haikus.

Please note: We at Haiku Heights only need the haiku to be reflective of the topic. You need not actually use the word in your haiku.







A small request to all our friends on the Blogger platform. If you could kindly turn off the word verification on your blogs, it'd be a lot easier for others to comment on your blog. The new CAPTCHA type of verification is quite muddling, and it's confusing even the actual bloggers as well.

Susan Daniel's suggestion, STARS. shall be our 156th prompt starting next Saturday.

3 comments:

Loredana Donovan said...

A lovely prompt, which can take different directions :) Thanks!

Siggi in Downeast Maine said...

Very nice prompt...
like it a lot
Peace,
Siggi in Downeast Maine

numerounity said...

nice prompt---too many syllables wasted :)
posted my haiku...hope it complies this time :)