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HAIKU RULES THAT HAVE COME AND GONE
Take Your Pick
Jane Reichhold


Haiku, which seem so light, free and spontaneous, are built on discipline. If you've a desire to write haiku, you are manifesting a desire for a few more rules in your life. And rules aren't bad as long as they are your rules for your work.
You've heard Robert Frost's saying poetry without rules is like a tennis match without a net and it is true also for haiku. And Basho had his motto: "Learn the rules; and then forget them."
But first he said, "Learn the rules." If you are at that stage of the game (we are all, at all times, students), here are some old and new rules. You can't physically follow all of these, because they conflict, but among them I would hope you'd pick a set just for you. Then write down your thoughts, impressions, and feelings while following your own rules.
As soon as you get proficient (you will notice your haiku all sound alike) it's time to raise the tennis net by picking a new rule or so, either from this list or one you've made up from reading and admiring other haiku, or, and this is possible and not treason, from other poetry genre.
Here we go:


1. Seventeen syllables in one line.


2. Seventeen syllables written in three lines.


3. Seventeen syllables written in three lines divided into 5-7-5.


4. Seventeen syllables written in a vertical (flush left or centered) line.


5. Less than 17 syllables written in three lines as short-long-short.


6. Less than 17 syllables written in three vertical lines as short-long-short.


7. Write what can be said in one breath.


8. Use a season word (kigo) or seasonal reference.


9. Use a caesura at the end of either the first or second line, but not at both.


10. Never have all three lines make a complete or run-on sentence.


11. Have two images that are only comparative when illuminated by the third image. Example: spirit in retreat / cleaning first the black stove / and washing my hands


12. Have two images that are only associative when illuminated by the third image. Example:

fire-white halo
at the moment of eclipse
I notice your face


13. Have two images that are only in contrast when illuminated by the third image. Example:

two things ready
but not touching the space between
fire


14. Always written in the present tense of here and now.


15. Limited use (or non-use) of personal pronouns.


16. Use of personal pronouns written in the lower case. Example: i am a ...


17. Eliminating all the possible uses of gerunds (ing endings on wording).


18. Study and check on articles. Do you use too many the's? too little? all the same in one poem or varied?


19. Use of common sentence syntax in both phrases.


20. Use of sentence fragments.


21. Study the order in which the images are presented. First the wide-angle view, medium range and zoomed in close-up.


22. Save the "punch line" for the end line.


23. Work to find the most fascinating and eye-catching first lines.


24. Just write about ordinary things in an ordinary way using ordinary language.


25. Study Zen and let your haiku express the wordless way of making images.


26. Study any religion or philosophy and let this echo in the background of your haiku.


27. Use only concrete images.


28. Invent lyrical expressions for the image.


29. Attempt to have levels of meaning in the haiku. On the surface it is a set of simple images; underneath a philosophy or lesson of life.


30. Use images that evoke simple rustic seclusion or accepted poverty. (sabi)


31. Use images that evoke classical elegant separateness. (shubumi)


32. Use images that evoke nostalgic romantic images. Austere beauty. (wabi)


33. Use images that evoke a mysterious aloneness. (Yugen)


34. Use of paradox.


35. Use of puns and word plays.


36. Write of the impossible in an ordinary way.


37. Use of lofty or uplifting images. (No war, blatant sex, or crime)


38. Telling it as it is in the real world around us.


39. Use only images from nature. (No mention of humanity.)


40. Mixing humans and nature in a haiku by relating a human feeling to an aspect of nature.


41. Designation of humans a non-nature and giving all these non-nature haiku another name.


42. Avoid all reference to yourself in the haiku.


43. Refer to yourself obliquely as the poet, this old man, or with a personal pronoun.


44. Use no punctuation for ambiguity.


45. Use all normal sentence punctuation
: = a full stop
; = a half stop or pause
... = something left unsaid
, = a slight pause
-- = saying the same thing in other words
. = full stop


46. Capitalize the first word of every line.


47. Capitalize the first word only.


48. Capitalize proper names according to English rules.


49. All words in lower case.


50. All words in upper case.


51. Avoid rhymes.


52. Rhyme last words in the first and third lines.


53. Use rhymes in other places within the haiku.


54. Use alliteration. Example by Calvin of Calvin & Hobbes:

twitching tufted tail
a toasty, tawny tummy:
a tired tiger


55. Use of words' sounds to echo feeling.


56. Always end the haiku with a noun.


57. Write haiku only from an "ah-ha" moment.


58. Use any inspiration as starting point to develop and write haiku. (These are known as desk haiku.)


59. Avoid too many (or all) verbs.


60. Cut out prepositions (in - on - at - among - between) whenever possible; especially in the short 1/3 phrase.


61. Eliminate adverbs.


62. Don't use more than one modifier per noun. This use should be limited to the absolute sense of the haiku.


63. Share your haiku by adding one at the close of your letters

.
64. Treat your haiku like poetry; it's not a greeting card verse.


65. Write down every haiku that comes to you. Even the bad ones. It may inspire the next one which will surely be better.


*** This article was recently {when was that?] published in Romanian in the periodical for The Constanta Haiku Society -- Albatross.

 

 

ARTICLES

Fragment and Phrase Theory
Jane Reichhold

Haiku Rules That Have Come and Gone - Take Your Pick
Jane Reichhold

Haiku Techniques by Jane Reichhold

A Discussion about the "Old pond" Haiku by Basho
Jane Reichhold

Ask Haikujane

Metaphor in Basho's Haiku by Jane Reichhold

Berry Blue Haiku Magazine for Young Readers
Jane Reichhold

The Why In The Way Of Haiku
Jane Reichhold

Apples, Apples and Haiku or Why We Don't Need Senryu Jane Reichhold

Senryu As a Dirty Word
Jane Reichhold

Links To The Past - An Article about Shiki
Jane Reichhold

Haiku Education: An Oxymoron
Or
Haiku: Poetry’s Stepchild Orphan
Jane Reichhold

Jane Attends a Poetry Class
and Writes some. . .

TALKS

Talk given at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco, California on April 28, 2009

Ukiahaiku Festival Workshop

Talk for ukiaHaiku Festival May 1, 2005

To the Poets at the November, 1992, HPNC Meeting,

INTERVIEWS

Ami Kaye Interviews Jane Reichhold

An Interview with Jane Reichhold by D. S. LLITERAS

Dialogue with a Poet: Jane Reichhold

Nanette Wylde of San Francisco Interview
with Jane Reichhold

Robert Wilson Interview for Simply Haiku

   
     
     
 


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Copyright © Jane Reichhold 2011.

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